0 used to refer to a person or thing that is similar to someone or something that existed in the past:
1 being a new or recent form of a person or thing from the past:
We have seen latter-day attempts to mitigate the effect of the tax on the industry.
He is a latter-day convert to the cause.
First, there is a danger that we tend to bring a latter-day imperialism to such a debate.
My constituents, too, see the bus companies as latter-day highway robbers.
The members of the consortium, these latter-day highway robbers, are charging £2.35 for this service.
This latter-day gold rush, this hunger for materials, is now having extremely brutal social and environmental repercussions and is continuing to fuel wars and corruption.
The taking up of ships from trade is no latter-day phenomenon.
We have a dampness and latter-day dereliction problem which destroys choice for thousands of ordinary tenants.