later

later

slang Goodbye (for now); see you again soon. OK, I've got to go—later! Later, man. I had a really great time.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

Later

and Late and Laters
interj. Good-bye. It’s time to cruise. Later. CU. Laters.
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See:
  • (goodbye) till later
  • (goodbye) until later
  • (I'll) smell ya later
  • (I'll) smell you later
  • a little later, perhaps
  • Can we continue this later?
  • catch (one) later
  • catch (someone) some other time
  • Catch me later
  • catch you later
  • check you
  • check you later
  • Could we continue this later?
  • cross that bridge later
  • I'll call back later
  • I'll see ya (later)
  • I'll see you (later)
  • I'll see you later
  • I'll try (one) later
  • I'll try to catch (one) later
  • I'll try to see (one) later
  • late in life
  • later
  • later on
  • later, alligator
  • later, gator
  • laters
  • perhaps a little later
  • postpone until (some later date or time)
  • see ya (later)
  • see you (later)
  • See you later
  • See you later, alligator
  • shoot first, ask questions later
  • sooner or later
  • sooner rather than later
  • to be named later
  • try to catch you some other time
  • until then
References in periodicals archive
"There's definitely an uptick" in schools starting later, said Stacy Simera, communications director for Start School Later, to U.S.
"There needs to be local plans to address concerns for people later in life.
Later, who is 44, to compete at the international Grand Prix level, the highest level of competition before the Olympic level.
Looking through her canvases later, I especially admired a watercolor of a vase with flowers.
Two days later, he shed his blood in Christ's memory.
A short time later, a team of grim-faced men from Custer Battles strode in, carrying heavy weapons and duffel bags.
Washington, Marcus Garvey, and Walter White, as well as key experiences during World War I and during his two stints with the NAACP, first as Director of Publicity and Research (1910-1934) and later as Director of Special Research (1944-1948).
President Kennedy, who was angry that any story at all had been published before the invasion, would later confide to a Times editor: "If you had printed more about the operation, you would have saved us from a colossal mistake."
A few years later, he revisited Rome, spending a year there in the company of his father.
To get through the ordeal, he composed the poem "Oh Tennessee, My Tennessee," which later became the state's official poem.
In 1967 he founded an institute there devoted to theoretical astronomy, but he quit the university five years later in a dispute over control of the institute after it was merged with Cambridge's observatories.
But last year, when the school superintendent of Pinellas County, Florida, proposed a later start time, parents concerned about kids' after-school jobs put an end to the plan.
In a later interview with the Associated Press, Fletcher, who is identified as a "lay minister" on his website, called ID "the foundational principle of our nation." He linked intelligent design to the Declaration of Independence, which mentions a "Creator" and said, "Our inalienable rights are based on the self-evident truth of those endowed inalienable rights.
Russell bought his first property in 1946--a vacant lot where he later built a duplex--it's likely that the ambitious 16-year-old had no idea what his first entrepreneurial endeavor would lead to.
(That business is part of today's Noveon.) Other early TPU suppliers included Bayer (Texin), Uniroyal (Roylar), Upjohn (Pellethane, later acquired by Dow), and Thiokol.