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distant
[ dis-tuhnt ]
adjective
- far off or apart in space; not near at hand; remote or removed (often followed by from ):
a distant place; a town three miles distant from here.
- apart or far off in time:
distant centuries past.
- remote or far apart in any respect:
a distant relative.
- reserved or aloof; not familiar or cordial:
a distant greeting.
- arriving from or going to a distance, as a communication, journey, etc.:
I have here a distant letter from Japan.
distant
/ ˈdɪstənt /
adjective
- far away or apart in space or time
- postpositive separated in space or time by a specified distance
- apart in relevance, association, or relationship
a distant cousin
- coming from or going to a faraway place
a distant journey
- remote in manner; aloof
- abstracted; absent
a distant look
Derived Forms
- ˈdistantly, adverb
- ˈdistantness, noun
Other Words From
- distant·ly adverb
- distant·ness noun
- over·distant adjective
- over·distant·ly adverb
- quasi-distant adjective
- quasi-distant·ly adverb
- ultra·distant adjective
- un·distant adjective
- un·distant·ly adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of distant1
Example Sentences
The prisoners were taken to the coastal fort at Elmina, before being shipped to Sierra Leone, and, in 1900, on to the distant Indian Ocean islands of Seychelles.
Lead actor Garcia-Rulfo, a distant relative of the novel’s author, set out to find the human nature within the disagreeable character.
Now, due to the advent of more powerful instruments like NASA's James Webb Space Telescope, detecting distant metal-poor galaxies has been made exponentially easier.
Now, more than 1,000 days later, after Congress has approved $175 billion in aid, it’s likely to fade into distant memory.
If they’re blue or red, their voters are relegated to the cheap seats as distant spectators to the main event being fought in a few purple swing states.
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