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[ UK /lˈe‍ɪtəst/ ]
[ US /ˈɫeɪtəst/ ]
NOUN
  1. the most recent news or development
    have you heard the latest?
ADJECTIVE
  1. up to the immediate present; most recent or most up-to-date
    the very latest scientific discoveries
    the news is up-to-the-minute
  2. in the current fashion or style

How To Use latest In A Sentence

  • The gossip columnist was paid to chronicle the latest escapades of the socially prominent celebrities.
  • His latest movie is just more of the same-exotic locations, car chases and a final shoot-out.
  • John Sayles is often hailed as the king of independent cinema, so it is little wonder that his latest movie, Silver City, was able to attract such a mouth-watering cast.
  • This latest fly is based on an earlier marabou tailed damsel nymph that was weighted down with lead wire.
  • The latest strategy is now seen dropping unsupported accusations across the media spectrum to the effect that the intelligence agency's assignment of Ambassador Joseph Wilson to look into the now-discredited Iraq/Niger/uranium claims were all part of a long-term insidious scheme to try and discredit the Bush Administration. Brad Friedman: Wingnuts Declare Coordinated All-Out Cross-Media War on CIA as Newest Front in TreasonGate!
  • I am negotiating with financiers to raise seed capital for my latest venture.
  • We can credibly describe the band's latest album as their best yet.
  • I would show up unannounced, watch Jaime teach calculus, chat with Principal Henry Gradillas, check in with other Advanced Placement classes and in the early afternoon call my editor in Washington to say I was chasing down the latest medfly outbreak story, or whatever seemed believable at the time. Unlike many, Escalante believed in teaching, not sorting
  • It's the sort of thing I tend to call a batshit story, and though this term has not caught on as the latest literary, uh, movement, it's the only label that seems to fit so much of the sort of writing I love. Archive 2005-12-01
  • Instead of talking about the mechanical superiority of their latest cars, manufacturers hired the sexiest, perkiest breasted young women they could find to writhe, lean and lick their lips next to their new products. Judith Acosta: How Marketers Capitalize On Your Fear: Confessions Of An Ex-Ad-Woman
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