A colleague just signed off an email to me with "more anon." What does that mean?

To be exact, his email signed off as follows:

*more anon, best, joe *

What does that mean?

FWIW, it was a short, choppy email with several typical email-style truncations and shorthand words. Maybe “more anon” is one of those, too.

Anon means soon or shortly.

“More another time” perhaps?

anon = ‘soon’ or ‘later’.

In that context, “anon” means in a short time or soon. It has no relation to the Latin/Greek-derived word anonymous – it comes from Old English.

More info:
O.E., on an “into one, straightway (in one course), at once”; by gradual misuse, “soon, in a little while” (1526). Per Online Etymology Dictionary.

Right. And “I’ll be with you in a second.”

This thread needs more Anon.

– Anon

Your buddy has been attending too many Shakespeare performances lately.

OK, Al.

It means your colleague is way smarter than you and you should treat him with due respect. :smiley:

Don’t I know it. And his Pulitzer Prize reminds me in case I forget!

Thanks all, for the informative responses.

Either that, or doing too many crossword puzzles.

So if somebody is going to Alanon, are they going to soon be drunk?

Read Henry IV, Part 1, Act II, Scene iv

No such thing! :wink:

That, or they’re going to talk to a wizard (sorry: “druid”) in a really bad and derivative piece of fantasy hackwork.