Hence (?), adv. [OE. hennes,
hens (the s is prop. a genitive ending; cf. -
wards), also hen, henne, hennen,
heonnen, heonene, AS. heonan, heonon,
heona, hine; akin to OHG. hinnān, G.
hinnen, OHG. hina, G. hin; all from the root of
E. he. See He.] 1. From this
place; away. "Or that we hence wend."
Chaucer.
Arise, let us go hence.
John
xiv. 31.
I will send thee far hence unto the
Gentiles.
Acts xxii. 21.
2. From this time; in the future; as, a week
hence. "Half an hour hence." Shak.
3. From this reason; as an inference or
deduction.
Hence, perhaps, it is, that Solomon calls the
fear of the Lord the beginning of wisdom.
Tillotson.
4. From this source or origin.
All other faces borrowed hence
Their light and grace.
Suckling.
Whence come wars and fightings among you? Come they
not hence, even of your lusts?
James. iv.
1.
&fist; Hence is used, elliptically and imperatively, for
go hence; depart hence; away; be gone.
"Hence with your little ones." Shak. -- From
hence, though a pleonasm, is fully authorized by the usage of
good writers.
An ancient author prophesied from
hence.
Dryden.
Expelled from hence into a world
Of woe and sorrow.
Milton.
Hence (?), v. t. To send
away. [Obs.] Sir P. Sidney.