aftercourse
Etymology
From after- + course.
aftercourse means the course (sequence of events or actions) that follows something; subsequent course. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 75 out of 100.
noun
- The course (sequence of events or actions) that follows something; subsequent course.“And if she should, which Heaven forbid,
O’rethrow me, as the Fidler did,
What after-course have I to take,
’Gainst losing all I have at Stake?”
- The final course of a meal.“Yet durst I sweare he neuer dranke Tabacco,
That smoake at those times was not in request,
But for this doting age reseru’d in store:
Now ’tis an after-course at euery feast,
To some it may doe good, but hurt to more.”
- A subsequent course of study.“[…] although her education had only the finish of the common schools, yet she had superior teachers, who directed her in an after-course of reading and study, which took her far beyond the ordinary school course.”