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- Dictionaryfar-off/fɑː(r) ˈɒf/
adjective
- 1. remote in time or space: "a far-off country"
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FAR-OFF definition: 1. A time that is far-off, is a long time before or after the present: 2. A far-off place is a…. Learn more.
The meaning of FAR-OFF is remote in time or space. How to use far-off in a sentence.
If you describe a moment in time as far off, you mean that it is a long time from the present, either in the past or the future. In those far off days it never entered anyone's mind that a woman could be prime minister.
FAR-OFF meaning: 1. A time that is far-off, is a long time before or after the present: 2. A far-off place is a…. Learn more.
Definition of far-off adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
far-off - very far away in space or time; "faraway mountains"; "the faraway future"; "troops landing on far-off shores"; "far-off happier times"
The earliest known use of the adjective far-off is in the early 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for far-off is from 1600, in the writing of William Shakespeare, playwright and poet. far-off is formed within English, by compounding.
FAR-OFF definition: a long distance away or a long time in the past or future: . Learn more.
If you describe a moment in time as far off, you mean that it is a long time from the present, either in the past or the future. In those far off days it never entered anyone's mind that a woman could be prime minister.
A complete guide to the word "FAR OFF": definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.