postscript

noun
/ˈpoʊst.skɹɪpt/US

Etymology

From New Latin postscriptum, from Latin, neuter of postscriptus, past participle of postscrībō (“write after”), from post (“after”) + scrībō (“write”). By surface analysis, post- + script.

  1. derived from postscriptum

Definitions

  1. An addendum to a letter, added after the author's signature.

    • As a rule Julian dictated to secretaries, and so fast that Libanius says the "tachygraphers" were unable to keep pace with him, but certain postscripts are marked "with his own hand."
  2. An addition to a story, play, etc. after its completion.

    • In a moving post-script to the novel, Forster tells the reader that the book was inspired by a visit to the home of Edward Carpenter.
  3. To extend (a letter or another document) with additional remarks.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for postscript. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA