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distant
[dis-tuhnt]
adjective
far off or apart in space; not near at hand; remote or removed (often followed byfrom ).
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
Other Word Forms
- distantly adverb
- distantness noun
- overdistant adjective
- overdistantly adverb
- quasi-distant adjective
- quasi-distantly adverb
- ultradistant adjective
- undistant adjective
- undistantly adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of distant1
Example Sentences
He often added tiny beads that shimmered like distant stars.
Yet the consequences of a distant war in Europe are more than visible.
Given the upheaval at boardroom level, and the challenging start to the window, recruiting six first-team players felt like a distant prospect at one point.
Ma’s cello, on the other hand, fits in, often remaining in the background, though not a distant background.
In the “see no color” 1990s liberal America sold itself on the false idea that bigotry and racist terror were such distant relics of a bygone age that this could be played for laughs.
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