noun
succeeding or future generations collectively: Judgment of this age must be left to posterity.
Posterity future generations is a straightforward word. It comes from Middle English posterite, posteriti a persons offspring, a familys successive generations, partly from Old French posterite, and partly from Latin 梯棗莽喧梗娶勳喧櫻莽 (stem 梯棗莽喧梗娶勳喧櫻喧-), which has the same meanings as in Old French and Middle English. 捩棗莽喧梗娶勳喧櫻莽 is a derivative of the adjective posterus future, later; its plural, 梯棗莽喧梗娶蘋, means ones descendants; future generations. Latin posterior later, later of two, younger is the comparative of posterus, and is familiar enough in English (the humorous, colloquial noun posterior or posteriors in the sense buttocks originated within English in the early 17th century; the sense does not exist in Latin). Posterity entered English in the 14th century.
Climate change is a tragedy, but Rich makes clear that it is also a crimea thing that bad people knowingly made worse, for their personal gain. That, I suspect, is one of the many aspects to the climate change battle that posterity will find it hard to believe, and impossible to forgive.
The act of 1866 gave the Freedmen’s Bureau its final form, the form by which it will be known to posterity and judged of men.
noun
a person's area of skill, knowledge, authority, or work: to confine suggestions to one's own bailiwick.
Bailiwick nowadays means ones area of skill, knowledge, authority, or work, and less commonly, its original sense the district within which a bailiff has jurisdiction. Bailiwick comes from Middle English baillifwik (bailliwik, bailewik), a compound noun formed from bailliff an officer of the court; an official with minor local authority and wick (wic, wike, wicke) dwelling, home, village, town, city, from Old English 滄蘋釵 “dwelling place, abode, from Latin 措蘋釵喝莽 village; a block (in a town or city often forming an administrative unit), which appears in placenames such as Sandwich (on the coast of Kent), Old English Sandwic, Sondwic market town on sandy soil, or Warwick village by the weir (low dam). Bailiwick entered English in the mid-15th century.
He was spooning up gelato but talking about music, which is his bailiwick, if its anybodys.
I wasnt surprised to see him there because this was an action venue that was right in his political bailiwick.泭
adverb
up to this time; until now: a fact hitherto unknown.
The adverb hitherto, up to this time or place, comes from Middle English hiderto; the modern spelling with th replacing d first appears in Wycliffes Bible (1382). Hitherto seems to have completely replaced hiderto by the time of Tyndales translation of the Bible in 1526. Hiderto first appears in English in the first half of the 13th century.
The attention suddenly lavished on this hitherto obscure doctrine is surprising, but heartening, to anyone who has long labored in the civil-rights field …
A team of archaeologists found new evidence for hitherto unknown features or monumental structures about two miles northeast of Stonehenge …