hence /ˈhɛn(t)s/
  (ad.)從此,以後;因此
  Hence adv.
  1. From this place; away. “Or that we hence wend.”
     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.”
  3. From this reason; therefore; -- 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.
  Note: ☞ 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.]
  ◄ ►
  hence
       adv 1: (used to introduce a logical conclusion) from that fact or
              reason or as a result; "therefore X must be true";
              "the eggs were fresh and hence satisfactory"; "we were
              young and thence optimistic"; "it is late and thus we
              must go"; "the witness is biased and so cannot be
              trusted" [syn: therefore, thence, thus]
       2: from this place; "get thee hence!"
       3: from this time; "a year hence it will be forgotten"