How To Use Far-off In A Sentence

  • At the heart of the plan, with broad perspectives in every direction, is the India Gate — a grandiose arch honoring the Indian conscripts, mostly Sikh from the names engraved, who fell on the far-off battlefields of Flanders and Gallipoli during World War I. City Walk: New Delhi
  • And through it all he had the quick memory of his mother's companionship, he could recall her rueful looks whenever the eager inaccurate ways, in which he reflected certain ineradicable tendencies of her own, had lost him a school advantage; he could remember her exhortations, with the dash in them of humorous self-reproach which made them so stirring to the child's affection; and he could realise their old far-off life at Murewell, the joys and the worries of it, and see her now gossiping with the village folk, now wearing herself impetuously to death in their service, and now roaming with him over the Surrey heaths in search of all the dirty delectable things in which a boy-naturalist delights. Robert Elsmere
  • I'll confess, one of my secret remedies for homesickness when I'm traveling in some far-off foreign land is to go back to my hotel and listen to National Public Radio on the Internet.
  • ALSO “— and he winked his right eye at the room at large — “excepting for the presence of the young couple I observe sitting opperSITE, who were NOT on the tappis, or included in the programme, in those far-off days — eh, Poll? Ultima Thule
  • Eight-year-old Bruno and his twelve-year-old sister Gretel find themselves alone with their mother in a cold, modernist estate-kept company only by soldiers, a stray inmate servant or two, far-off glimpses of "pajama" - clad "farmers," and a frequent plume of acrid, pungent black smoke. ChristianCinema.com - Faith Affirming and Family Approved Entertainment
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  • Before you invite some far-off microstate as your military ally, think about what the damnfools might do and to whom. McCain Calls On United Nations To Condemn Russia's "Unacceptable" Aggression
  • For even in her white terai and belted suit of white linen she was a vision appropriate only to the far-off world that this man had left behind him at the call of duty -- a world of delicate living and subtle sensations, of frail flesh in luxurious settings, of sophistication that would have shrunk from every crudity, and exquisiteness that would have shriveled at the touch of hardship. Sacrifice
  • The strange far-off oriental words which today scholars discuss, theosophists manipulate, and charlatans employ as catchpennies were common words in the every-day speech of the Hindu people, two or three thousand years ago. The Religions of Japan From the Dawn of History to the Era of Méiji
  • That far-off peak, shaped rather like an uprisen serpent, was that Mt. Songs of Love & Death
  • Is it possible that in some far-off galaxy as yet beyond our ken creatures very different but perhaps far superior to us in intelligence live in a civilisation of their own?
  • A wolf was "yapping" on a swell, and a far-off heron was uttering his booming cry. The Eagle's Heart
  • From somewhere far-off in the building, he could hear a faint echo of the nurses' choir.
  • far-off happier times
  • `A storybook kingdom," he whispered, his eyes glassy, far-off. WEB OF DREAMS
  • It was not the usual indistinct crackle of a far-off transmission, but a crystal-clear whistle as if someone was on her boat.
  • Silence reigned but for tumbleweed passing through and then the sound of a far-off wolf howling.
  • There was no far-off hum of constant traffic, no train whistles or car horns, and certainly no distant streams of moving lights from the nearest highway.
  • For the romantic these are the hills of home, scattered with Munros and sufficiently unpeopled to turn a day's ridge-walk into an adventure, an open-air playground with soaring eagles and far-off deer for company.
  • Europe was a society of restless and rootless people, many repeatedly forced to move to try to escape the ravages of the Plague, others regularly conscripted for far-off wars, some in constant motion like the peripatetic court of Spain.
  • As a result, you're always hearing tales about the perfect slice of pizza in distant Flatbush, say, or the incomparable samosa in far-off Jackson Heights.
  • The album featured a liberal use of theremin, glockenspiel and organ; its far-off vibe could be bombastic and quaint, earthy and robotic at the same time.
  • They may also use the infrasonic roar of distant ocean waves or wind in far-off mountains as acoustic landmarks. Birdology
  • Philip had seen him lowered into his lowly grave in the far-off, humble martyry; now he had seen his golden coffin inhumed beside the Imperial tombs. Gathering Clouds: A Tale of the Days of St. Chrysostom
  • Does the cosmic tug and pull of these far-off fireballs (and our more neighborly planets) help shape our lives from birth?
  • Scots like to compare it to far-off bagpipes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her heart had thrilled with joy to see so many grip hands and stand together, officers and stewards and gasmen and lightermen and engine-drivers and cooks and draymen, from Adelaide to far-off Cooktown, in every port, great and small, all round the eastern coast. The Workingman's Paradise An Australian Labour Novel
  • In the neighborhood of Mount Erymanthus, in Arcadia, there lived, in those far-off days, a savage boar that was in the habit of sallying forth from his lair and laying waste the country round about, nor had any man been able to capture or restrain him. Young Folks Treasury, Volume 2 (of 12)
  • In Egypt your Nubian sailor prays in the stern of your dahabiyeh; and your Egyptian boatman prays by the rudder of your boat; and your black donkey-boy prays behind a red rock in the sand; and your camel-man prays when you are resting in the noontide, watching the far-off quivering mirage, lost in some wayward dream. The Spell of Egypt
  • As we consider the road that unfolds before us, we remember with humble gratitude those brave Americans who, at this very hour, patrol far-off deserts and distant mountains.
  • Their explanation: a faint, far-off companion star to the Sun was sending down a rain of comets when it reached just the right point in its orbit.
  • They brought into the hot hard streets the witchery of the woodlands; and no one could inhale for a moment, in passing by, the sweet wafture of their fragrance without being transported in imagination to far-off scenes endeared to memory, and without a thrill of nameless tenderness at the heart. Roman Mosaics Or, Studies in Rome and Its Neighbourhood
  • So Bob turned and faced what remained of the life of a man who once had commanded, however briefly, Able Company, 2/28, on a far-off place called Iwo Jima, a hell that neither his only son nor even Gunny Swagger, three-tour survivor of Vietnam, could imagine. A Bob Lee Swagger eBook Boxed Set
  • For two days they followed Stoney Book northeast through the trackless northern wastes, and on the third, Lily was certain that the Marsh must lay far-off yet.
  • I will not stop to inquire whether our guest may or may not have looked backward, through rather too long a period for us, to some remote and distant time when he might possibly bear some far-off likeness to a certain Spanish archbishop whom Gil Blas once served. Speeches: Literary and Social
  • It finds her in a maximum security prison on a far-off planet.
  • Thus comes it that we take a final glance through two childish prison-houses, in far-separate Russian cities, wherein a youth and a maiden lie nightly dreaming the same dreams: one of them a spirit already bonded to the service of mind under the whip of circumstance: destined to storm rocky heights, from which hard-won eminences he shall command great views of sweeping plains and far-off mountain ranges; the other a pretty chrysalis on the eve of her change into a butterfly of butterflies; who is, nevertheless, to attempt flights overhigh and overfar for her frail wings; venturing to unfriendly lands whence she must return with frayed and tired pinions and a bruised and bleeding little soul. The Genius
  • Studying Judaism is like visiting a far-off society whose native informants are the Rabbis, and whose testimony about what Jews think and do is available in the books those rabbis wrote.
  • There is a guncotton thud, some far-off shift or heave that is also a local sensation, a hollow body sound. Underworld
  • From somewhere far-off in the building, he could hear a faint echo of the nurses' choir.
  • troops landing on far-off shores
  • Archbishop Conrad had been remiss in carrying out the conciliary measures; in the beginning of 1416 he had, in concert with the king, suspended the interdict on the far-off chance of thus conciliating the dissidents. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability
  • The name Yule carries us back to the far-off ages when the heathen nations of the North held their annual winter festival in honour of the sun. Little Folks (December 1884) A Magazine for the Young
  • However, we are also making a habit of marooning ordinary Canadians in far-off lands, with no such prospects of success. Archive 2009-02-01
  • Bees dart homewards from far-off fields with the directness of an arrow.
  • To him, perhaps, it has been given to listen to the voice of the ancient poet, heard as a far-off whisper; to breathe in forgotten gardens the perfume of long dead flowers; to contemplate the love of women whose beauty is all perished in the dust; to hearken to the sound of the harp and the sistra, to be the possessor of the riches of historical romance. The Treasury of Ancient Egypt Miscellaneous Chapters on Ancient Egyptian History and Archaeology
  • She could hear her mother-in-law continue speaking but the words were unintelligible and seemed to come from a far-off distance. ANGELS EVERYWHERE
  • Scots like to compare it to far-off bagpipes. Times, Sunday Times
  • I found a place where politics still ranks low in the order of things, where life has more immediate things to concern it, and where the affairs of the far-off capital seem scarcely to impinge.
  • Each gyroscope's axis, while maintaining its direction with respect to local space-time, will no longer align on the far-off star.
  • In the forest he learned charity, sympathy, helpfulness -- in a word neighborliness -- for in that far-off frontier life all the wealth of India, had a man possessed it, could not have bought relief from danger or help in time of need, and neighborliness became of prime importance. The Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln
  • But the Buff Rock, a melody in color, shows that consonance, that consentaneousness, of flesh to feather that makes the plucked fowl to the feathered fowl what high noon is to the faint and far-off dawn -- a glow of golden legs and golden neck, mellow, melting as butter, and all the more so with every unpicked pinfeather. The Hills of Hingham
  • It stretches from the Atlantic shore through the whole width of Brazil into Peru, to the very foot of the Andes -- one vast extent of red sandstone, capped by a yellow-ochred clay; not only along the banks of the main river, but forming the sides of those of its tributaries, to their far-off sources, probably over the whole basin of the Paraguay and the Rio de la Plata. The Western World Picturesque Sketches of Nature and Natural History in North and South America
  • Thus comes it that we take a final glance through two childish prison-houses, in far-separate Russian cities, wherein a youth and a maiden lie nightly dreaming the same dreams: one of them a spirit already bonded to the service of mind under the whip of circumstance: destined to storm rocky heights, from which hard-won eminences he shall command great views of sweeping plains and far-off mountain ranges; the other a pretty chrysalis on the eve of her change into a butterfly of butterflies; who is, nevertheless, to attempt flights overhigh and overfar for her frail wings; venturing to unfriendly lands whence she must return with frayed and tired pinions and a bruised and bleeding little soul. The Genius
  • Nash's team used its global-positioning - satellite receiver to establish its position, and then through the brownish haze, team members plotted the azimuth and direction to a far-off enemy bunker.
  • So there was a vision of treasure, far-off blood, and fear.
  • I could browse bohemian bookstores in far-off, mysterious Hollywood.
  • But this plain, where the fellaheen are stooping to the soil, and the women are carrying the water-jars, and the children are playing in the doura, and the oxen and the camels are working with ploughs that look like relics of far-off days, is the possession of the two great presiding beings whom you see from an enormous distance, the Colossi of The Spell of Egypt
  • She was an exotic delicacy he wanted to try, a sweet confection from a far-off land.
  • To the unfamiliar, that term may seem off-putting, like a new soft-rock genre that leans heavily on harp solos.But it's possible many of us will be using cloud music systems in the not-far-off future.
  • Women weave scarves that are sold in far-off countries.
  • Could it be that one far-off day intelligent computers will speculate about their own lost origins?
  • But the older man's eyes were looking straight ahead, fixedly, as if watching some far-off scene. KARA KUSH
  • They say that there are white men who come over the great salt lake from far-off lands in big _big_ canoes. The Walrus Hunters A Romance of the Realms of Ice
  • Or is he just downright hoity-toity, with that nose in the air and far-off stare?
  • It was a responsible situation he felt for a boy of thirteen, and he meant to do his very best to keep it now that he had been lucky enough to get it; in the far-off future, too, he saw himself no longer the van-boy, but in the proud position now occupied by Joshua as driver, and this he considered, though a lofty, was by no means an unreasonable ambition. Our Frank and other stories
  • At the entrance to a far-off village, the hunters take the initiative of offering you - since you are a sinbo, a donsoba (a master hunter) - the shoulder of a slaughtered bubale. Heraclitean Fire
  • It's hard to make a smoke plume look more threatening than a far-off contrail.
  • It was quiet in Small Joy, except for the crazy pinging call of a bobolink and the faint, far-off sound of a rooster. The Dirty Life
  • CherriesCherries bring with them a certain frivolity, a carefree joy like hearing the far-off laughter of a child at play. Tender delights
  • Still, I have to wonder about the raucous calls we hear for storming ramparts in far-off places.
  • You sit alone in a bright, comfortable room; the clock ticks companionably; there is no other sound in the world except the constant scratching of your pen, and the occasional far-off puffing of a freight-train coming into Lichfield; there is snow outside, but before your eyes someone, that is not you exactly, arranges and redrills the scrawls which will bring back the sweet and languid summer and remarshal all its pleasant trivialities for anyone that chooses to read through the printed page, although he read two centuries hence, in Nova Zembla .... The Cords of Vanity A Comedy of Shirking
  • The execution of Philip of Mahdiyah happened at the very time when engravers were at work on the silver planisphere, and al-Idrisi was bringing his decade and a half of study to an end by writing A Diversion for the Man Longing to Travel to Far-Off Places. Delizia!
  • TKtk Pitcher Chris Young of the New York Mets On the radar gun, it appears dangerously hittable, the kind of mid-80s fastball that lands a pitcher in some far-off, minor-league outpost. The Best Optical Illusion in Baseball

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