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other side

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:Other Side

English

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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otherside

  1. (idiomatic, usually preceded bythe and sometimescapitalized) Theafterlife, as asupernaturalrealm inhabited byspirits ofdeceased people.
    • 1906,Mark Twain, “Amended Obituaries”, inThe $30,000 Bequest and Other Stories:
      [I]t has seemed to me wise to take such measures as may be feasible, to acquire, by courtesy of the press, access to my standing obituaries, with the privilege—if this is not asking too much—of editing, not their Facts, but their Verdicts. This, not for the present profit, further than as concerns my family, but as a favorable influence usable onthe Other Side, where there are some who are not friendly to me.
    • 1994 August 8,Pico Iyer, “Death Be Not a Stranger”, inTime:
      They tell us that something is waiting for us onthe other side, that death may be a pilgrimage and not a destination, that the afterlife is a warm awakening after the fretful dream of life.
    • 2008 April 8, Mark Rahner, “Psychic John Holland talks to the dead”, inSeattle Times, retrieved22 July 2011:
      "Well, when people fromthe other side communicate with me, they're using thought energy, just like you can't see radio waves coming into the radio."
  2. (idiomatic, usually preceded bythe) The time after the solution or completion of aproblem,adversity, orchallenge.
  3. (idiomatic, preceded bythe) The otherside of theAtlantic Ocean (usually between theUnited States and theUnited Kingdom).
    • 1892 September 7, “[Grover] Cleveland’s English Allies”, inProtection and Reciprocity, volume I, number 3, New York, N.Y.,→OCLC,page[2], column 1:
      O, how the Britisher longs to vote for Cleveland! But he cannot, and must content himself with merely sending over funds and doing what he may from theother side for the cause he loves so well.
    • 1905 December 14, “‘Maizypop’ in London”, inThe Seattle Post-Intelligencer, volume XLIX, number30, Seattle, Wash.,→ISSN,→OCLC,page 6, column 3:
      The latest of these Yankee “invasions” is popcorn—which is called “maizypop” in the British Isles in deference to English diction and for the reason that on theother side “corn” means any kind of grain.
    • 1912 October 4, “Owen Moran, British Box-Fighter, Celebrates His 28th Birthday”, inBridgeport Evening Farmer, volume48, number236, Bridgeport, Conn.,→ISSN,→OCLC,page13, column 4:
      Brumagum, as they call it on theother side, is quite an industrial town, and Owen’s parents were poor but honest proletariats.
  4. (idiomatic, UK, slang, dated) The othertelevisionchannel (when only two were available).
    This is boring. What's on theother side?
  5. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically:seeother,‎side.
    We crossed to theother side of the road.

Translations

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afterlifeseeafterlife

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