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remote
[ ri-moht ]
adjective
- far apart; far distant in space; situated at some distance away:
the remote jungles of Brazil.
- out-of-the-way; secluded:
a remote village;
a remote mountaintop.
- (of an electronic device or technical process) operating or controlled from a distance, as by remote control:
a remote camera.
- not direct, primary, or proximate; not directly involved or influential:
the remote causes of the war.
- slight or faint; unlikely:
The committee doesn't have the remotest idea of how to address the basic issue.
So with two games remaining, we actually have a remote chance of making the play-offs.
Synonyms: doubtful
- noting or relating to work, schooling, or other activities that take place away from their usual place, site, or building: Teachers have distance learning lessons prepared in advance for weather emergencies that necessitate remote instruction.
The company allows remote work for freelancers, but full-time employees are expected to work on site.
Teachers have distance learning lessons prepared in advance for weather emergencies that necessitate remote instruction.
- reserved and distant in manner; not warmly cordial; aloof.
- far off; abstracted; removed:
principles remote from actions.
- distant in time:
remote antiquity.
- distant in relationship or connection:
a remote ancestor.
noun
- Radio and Television. a broadcast, usually live, from a location outside a studio.
remote
/ rɪˈməʊt /
adjective
- located far away; distant
- far from any centre of population, society, or civilization; out-of-the-way
- distant in time
- distantly related or connected
a remote cousin
- removed, as from the source or point of action
- slight or faint (esp in the phrases not the remotest idea, a remote chance )
- (of a person's manner) aloof or abstracted
- operated from a distance; remote-controlled
a remote monitor
Derived Forms
- reˈmoteness, noun
- reˈmotely, adverb
Other Words From
- re·mote·ly adverb
- re·mote·ness noun
- un·re·mote adjective
- un·re·mote·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of remote1
Example Sentences
“Defendants devised a scheme to obtain payments through the use of coercive threats from anyone with any ties to Combs — no matter how remote,” lawyers for the unnamed plaintiff wrote.
Hot dogs, or “meat apples,” as we’ve come to jokingly call them, are a gas station go-to in the remote Faroe Islands.
Japan is also one of more than 60 countries that offers a digital nomad visa, which allows remote workers to legally live in the country for up to one year.
Next, the study coordinator captured clinical and dermoscopic images, which were sent to a central server for remote review by a separate team of skin cancer specialists with expertise using dermoscopy.
For instance, he says one remote corner of federal law gives the president the power to conduct mass layoffs without regard to civil service protections.
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