pēc

Etymology
As adverb (the nowadays more frequent prepositional use is a later development), is the reflex of an earlier, still found dialectally and in folk songs, itself from , an old instrumental plural form of , a morphological variant of. The original meaning was therefore sequentiality, like footprints: “one after the other,” from which later “after that,” “after...”.

Adverb

 * 1) after, afterwards, later, later on in a moment of time posterior to the reference time

Preposition

 * 1) ; after, in
 * 2) ; after
 * 3) ; after, by
 * 4) ; for, after, in order to get
 * 5)  ; for, because of, for the sake of
 * 6) ; by, according to
 * 7) ; by, according to
 * 8) ; like, after
 * 1) ; after
 * 2) ; after, by
 * 3) ; for, after, in order to get
 * 4)  ; for, because of, for the sake of
 * 5) ; by, according to
 * 6) ; by, according to
 * 7) ; like, after
 * 1) ; after, by
 * 2) ; for, after, in order to get
 * 3)  ; for, because of, for the sake of
 * 4) ; by, according to
 * 5) ; by, according to
 * 6) ; like, after
 * 1)  ; for, because of, for the sake of
 * 2) ; by, according to
 * 3) ; by, according to
 * 4) ; like, after
 * 1)  ; for, because of, for the sake of
 * 2) ; by, according to
 * 3) ; by, according to
 * 4) ; like, after
 * 1)  ; for, because of, for the sake of
 * 2) ; by, according to
 * 3) ; by, according to
 * 4) ; like, after
 * 1) ; by, according to
 * 2) ; by, according to
 * 3) ; like, after
 * 1) ; by, according to
 * 2) ; by, according to
 * 3) ; like, after
 * 1) ; by, according to
 * 2) ; like, after
 * 1) ; by, according to
 * 2) ; like, after
 * 1) ; by, according to
 * 2) ; like, after
 * 1) ; like, after
 * 1) ; like, after
 * 1) ; like, after
 * 1) ; like, after
 * 1) ; like, after
 * 1) ; like, after

Usage notes
Usually the genitive is used with, but in the phrase  “after that” the dative form  of  “that” is unexpectedly used.