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Synonyms
Examples of far-off in a Sentence
many a young person has joined the military with the hope of traveling to far-off places
the impossibility of predicting what life will be like in the far-off future
Recent Examples on the Web
Americans have long pinned these abuses to far-off regimes and distant times: Nazi Germany, Pinochet’s Chile, the Soviet Union.
—Ana Raquel Minian, TIME, 30 May 2024
This far-off perspective is captured by the S-matrix.
—Quanta Magazine, 23 May 2024
This transit is all about exploring intriguing and unusual ideas, whether that means traveling to far-off countries or returning to school to further your education.
—Tarot.com, Baltimore Sun, 22 Mar. 2024
Drastically smaller data centers can be placed close to their target applications, rather than being in some far-off football-stadium-size facility.
—Anna Herr, IEEE Spectrum, 15 May 2024
But the departure cannot happen as, lying in a far-off forest is Nam’s father, a soldier, whose remains they’re compelled to find.
—Patrick Frater, Variety, 11 May 2024
The far-off setting emphasizes the lavish and luxe, though the narrative is cheaply woven and fairly threadbare.
—Courtney Howard, Variety, 9 May 2024
As dystopian, ground-pounding carnage dominates the trailer, Lopez rockets off to a far-off planet to capture a renegade robot and teams up with a computer program named Smith in what appears, at times, like buddy comedy.
—Etan Vlessing, The Hollywood Reporter, 23 Apr. 2024
By the time that bit of fantasy circulated on social media, romanticizing the far-off past had become a mid-pandemic, post-insurrection cultural pattern.
—Amanda Montell, Twin Cities, 21 Apr. 2024
These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'far-off.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Word History
First Known Use
15th century, in the meaning defined above
Time Traveler
The first known use of far-off was
in the 15th century
Dictionary Entries Near far-off
Cite this Entry
“Far-off.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/far-off. Accessed 10 Jun. 2024.
Kids Definition
far-off
adjectiveˈfär-ˈȯf
: remote in time or space
More from Merriam-Webster on far-off
Nglish: Translation of far-off for Spanish Speakers
Britannica English: Translation of far-off for Arabic Speakers
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