How To Use Faraway In A Sentence

  • He hears of men going to wars, but it is always a distant thing in a faraway place for him.
  • Her pale face had taken on a dreamy glow, a faraway look glazed her eyes.
  • The moon shines on faraway places and love could be crossing continents to find you. The Sun
  • Mars visits your chart of faraway faces and places and people in another land talk about you for two exciting reasons. The Sun
  • An earlier essay by Ms. Wu, titled ‘Cherishing a Faraway Place,’ recalled her rural upbringing and struck a bucolic tone about the simple, honest values of the peasantry.
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  • Her eyes were dreamy and faraway and although she looked into mine I knew it wasn't me he was seeing.
  • Down La Canebière I stroll, heading for the glinting, faraway turquoise eyespot of the Old Port, following women dressed in ankle-length raincoats and Islamic head scarves, long-faced men in frayed djellabas and knit skullcaps, gangly youths with scruffy beards. Sunstroked
  • A certain strange, farawayness of thought is apparent, and a grave tenderness that is not quite like anything he had previously written. Edward MacDowell
  • Sometimes he would get that faraway look, like he was a million miles away.
  • Just to test her, for there is something in the animation of her face and the farawayness of the eye that makes you suspect her sincerity, you say: The Wit and Humor of America, Volume IX (of X)
  • These faraway lands offer each of us the chance to escape our safe, constrained and overcrowded homeland to better define ourselves on our own terms. Times, Sunday Times
  • The yardbirds are in the throes of rumour-induced psychosis after being gripped by speculation that our entire unit is about to be transported to a faraway place.
  • His idea of clear doesn't necessarily mean that the road could not suddenly be rendered unclear, as when a couple of competing drivers come careering around a faraway curve towards you. Free riding the roads of Mexico
  • Amid a sea of melismatic showoffs and crass belters, he stood out as an old-fashioned crooner in the thrall of a faraway vision.
  • Her brain willed her fingers to conquer their heaviness, their farawayness, and write: Captivity
  • Although I sometimes feel like a foreigner in a faraway town, I have always felt comforted by the vastness and beauty of the land.
  • The postman is used to delivering mysterious parcels, packets and letters to the old ranch house, mostly from faraway places with strange sounding names.
  • This is a closeup pali, and behind that are some faraway ones covered in clouds, and on the bottom there are some people walking into my picture.
  • He stood motionless, listening; but no sound broke the morning slumbrousness, except the faraway warbling of a thrush in the first light. The Return
  • Atara, whose eyes took on the faraway glister of the stars, spoke the name of the Tur-Solonu in a strange voice. THE LIGHTSTONE: BOOK ONE, PART ONE OF THE EA CYCLE
  • I think my first plane flight wasn't until I was 12, and that was to the faraway place of Arizona.
  • So, in pre-internet days, family research could only be done by travelling to faraway places and digging through records and archives.
  • A bloke in eyeliner with a faraway look? Times, Sunday Times
  • But it's not just a book about things that happen over there in faraway places.
  • After all, it rarely addresses the full costs of those conflicts to U.S. troops (including their redeployment to war zones, even when already traumatized), let alone to foreign non-combatants in faraway Muslim lands. William J. Astore: The New American Isolationism: The Cost of Turning Away From War's Horrific Realities
  • Tucker flirts with classic forms like the sonnet and, in “The Woman in the Faraway House,” terza rima (while avoiding its overlapping rhymes): 2008 September 01 « One-Minute Book Reviews
  • Their decisions are taken at faraway centres, and almost always adhere to a uniform policy framework applicable to all protected areas, thus neglecting issues exclusive to one area.
  • The days of the Empire were by then long gone, but not so the English romance with faraway places or its nostalgia for the past.
  • Eager to learn from the great man, she hangs on his every word, reminding him of his own faraway innocence and purity of motive.
  • Eager to learn from the great man, she hangs on his every word, reminding him of his own faraway innocence and purity of motive.
  • He shipped others to a faraway town or gave them to a trusted friend.
  • As the Escalade turned into Sedona's secluded Enchantment Resort-nestled on 70 acres in the midst of the red rock-bound Boynton Canyon -- my impression wasn't of being in a faraway part of the country but on another planet altogether. Monique Stringfellow: First Impressions of the Desert
  • Why not also indulge the pleasure of reading about fancier meals and faraway places?
  • A cuckoo called from faraway, a greater spotted woodpecker hammered out an urgent tattoo.
  • But so long as this was happening in a faraway country, it did not seem so important. Times, Sunday Times
  • As well as keeping down rats and mice, they provided welcome companionship for lonely sailors fighting faraway wars. The Sun
  • Suddenly, the sharp call of a faraway horn caught the trio's attention.
  • My desk is piled high with invitations from car firms to join them on exotic trips to faraway lands. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was a grand destination, a title now reserved for Caribbean hideaways and faraway ski resorts.
  • Many of the best Tsumeb cerussite, dioptase, azurite, smithsonite, and other specimens passed through his hands en route to some faraway collection.
  • It wasn't just a phone call in the deepest night to a faraway place with a remote person about a crazy subject.
  • Yet, she was transferred to a faraway village where it was impossible for her to get regular and quality medical treatment.
  • The moon focuses on faraway faces and places. The Sun
  • Then Night came down like the feathery soot of a smoky lamp, and smutted first the bedquilt, then the hearth-rug, then the window-seat, and then at last the great, stormy, faraway outside world.
  • The moon high up the night I hope my love to you can follow you to faraway places.
  • She dreamed of flying away to exotic faraway places.
  • Perhaps he spoke to me, perhaps not, everything sounded distant and faraway.
  • In such a snowy night in the northland, I will wake gain. Faraway, how are you?
  • All these years after that awful day our leaders are still trying to figure out how to stop the terror at its source - those Al-Qaeda sponsored training centers which pockmark the landscape in faraway places like Afghanistan and Pakistan. Diane Dimond: The Terror Threat Still Exists
  • From the mambo to street stomp, dance can take you back in time to the big band era, or to faraway lands like Morocco and Brazil.
  • He did not like using computers, but one wonders if the many fine blogs that make faraway and foreign spaces into intimate places for us would have changed his mind about technology.
  • Consequently, what illustrations exist of the Acadian landscape tend to be faraway and vague.
  • As my spirit passed through the last stage to death, I felt a warmth spread throughout my entire body and heard a piercing screech from a faraway place called life. GARDEN OF PROMISES • by Allison Sherman
  • Long, long ago, in a very, very faraway place, an old tribal chief found himself terminally ill.
  • Literature experts say the faraway land in his poem means a liberated state and that his mother actually represents that country.
  • The moon high up the night I hope my love to you can follow you to faraway places.
  • In the book of Jonah, which most scholars consider post-exilic, God showers compassionate forgiveness on sinners in the faraway city of Nineveh. One World, Under God
  • Atara, whose eyes took on the faraway glister of the stars, spoke the name of the Tur-Solonu in a strange voice. THE LIGHTSTONE: BOOK ONE, PART ONE OF THE EA CYCLE
  • The more he talks, the more it becomes clear that there is something dreamy and faraway about him. Times, Sunday Times
  • Anyone else in faraway and exotic places would like their own 200 word slot?
  • She appears again in another story, ‘The Comet’, where ‘In a faraway square the mad Tluja, driven to despair by the nagging of small boys, would dance her wild saraband, lifting high her skirt to the amusement of the crowd.’
  • The moon visiting your chart of faraway faces and places gives life an international flavour. The Sun
  • The roan reminded me of him, and I recalled fondly how fast his legs had been, and how I had yearned to gallop him to faraway lands, but hadn't known where to go.
  • Compared to the struggles of faraway strangers depicted in docos and newsflashes, the lot of a citizen in a 21st Century western democracy is mostly a Godsend.
  • He was staring at a spot on my rug, his expression faraway. SEEING GREEN
  • Ukraine may be a place we know little about but it is no faraway country. Times, Sunday Times
  • Something beautiful but so far away-like the music of a faraway violin or the susurration of a distant wave.
  • Once upon a time in a faraway land there lived a princess in a big castle.
  • His eyes took on a faraway look, as of ice glazing over the dark blue sea. The Broken God
  • We all have our little vices, and mine don't happen to include standing in smoke-filled rooms peering at screens as faraway horses with strange sounding names slog it out in the 3.30 at Johannesburg.
  • We all know that one won't disappear into the frozen landscape of her faraway Arctic state — not when book deals, party leadership and media stardom beckon from the Lower 48. These campaign stars helped make presidential politics pop
  • The real problem is the inattention from the State towards to those faraway areas. Global Voices in English » Peru: Cold Temperatures Continue in Puno
  • Tony's voice was just on the other side of the door, but it sounded faraway and distant.
  • The brilliant beacons whose radiation streams out of faraway galaxies are known as quasars.
  • But his eyes seemed distant and faraway, seeing more than just what lay before him.
  • Such constant interventions in faraway countries might seem to hold limited appeal for Americans.
  • His default mood is a charming longing for faraway places. Times, Sunday Times
  • The territory of the setting sun is also the territory of the faraway, of what is elsewhere.
  • Its contents smelled of Scottish mildew and stone, and spindrift, and stevedore's spilt beer, and untreated crate wood, and alien scents of faraway cargo, the wafture of seas and continents.
  • The moon in your chart of faraway faces and places adds excitement to holiday plans. The Sun
  • The moon high up the night I hope my love to you can follow you to faraway places.
  • It's already claiming conspicuous success in sprouting its special "Kiri" tree in faraway places. AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed
  • In Britain, potteries in and around London and Liverpool and as faraway as Ireland supplied the growing demand and turned out numerous forms, ranging from plates to posset pots, salt cellars, and vases.
  • A doubt like faraway thunder threatens to ruin the day, that it's squandered on this.
  • The moon moves into the part of your chart that deals with faraway faces and places and there is a surprise success with an international flavour. The Sun
  • It is easier to nitpick at our own shortcomings than to fret about faraway problems. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's never easy to be the hegemon; intentions, no matter how benevolent, will always be seen by others, in faraway places, as malevolent.
  • The bustling city makes a cosmopolitan contrast to the faraway spots visited earlier on the voyage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Something beautiful but so far away-like the music of a faraway violin or the susurration of a distant wave.
  • It is, in a memorable phrase from the 1930s, a faraway country of which we know little.
  • People routinely call the company wanting to take milk on vacation or ship ice cream to faraway relatives.
  • A faraway look comes into his eyes. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have no further reason to deplore its farawayness. My Friend Prospero
  • My father's eyes looked distant, the sort of foreign, faraway gaze he always had when he was being serious.
  • A temperature inversion across the lake allowed this faraway city to be briefly visible.
  • The more he talks, the more it becomes clear that there is something dreamy and faraway about him. Times, Sunday Times
  • You listen to the tumblers falling in a lock, with a sound like faraway applause.
  • Then there are the stories of faraway lands and long journeys through fretful nights.
  • The moon high up the night I hope my love to you can follow you to faraway places.
  • He saluted that faraway parasailor, then stepped off the porch, headed for Candy, come what may. One-ClickBuy:SeptemberHarlequinBlaze
  • We turned a corner into another long, stifling, shadowy corridor and heard music, faraway and insistent, the percussion first. DOWNTOWN
  • She loved me enough to let me go fight a war in a faraway country because my conscience was pulling me there. Christianity Today
  • His face wore a glazed, faraway expression.
  • But aside from that, I couldn't help but notice that faraway look he had.
  • Now we awake to the nightmare that tens of millions of faraway innocents live every moment.
  • He'd hear the faraway doorbell sound repeat. Times, Sunday Times
  • The events of the previous day seemed so faraway, as though only a distant memory.
  • The postman is used to delivering mysterious parcels, packets and letters to the old ranch house, mostly from faraway places with strange sounding names.
  • She is wearing a light, flimsy dress, very fey, and her face has a faraway expression.
  • So a young man unsure of himself in a faraway land would do well to take his line from the Duke. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her subjects are usually depicted with faraway Botticelli eyes and zaftig physiques, placed amid quasi-Platonic iconographic schemes and classical-looking drapery.
  • An opal ring on her finger caught the fire of a faraway chandelier.
  • As you enter the Winter Garden Theatre, you see the interior of a grungy circus tent and hear faraway music and applause.
  • Jim stared at it a long moment, his eyes taking on a faraway, distant look.
  • Avis always dreamed of an exotic vacation in some faraway place.
  • Once running wild, he is now a submissive workhorse with a faraway look in his eyes. Times, Sunday Times
  • I could image the sea reefs and gold fish swimming all set to the tone of the music of "A tonga da mironga do kabuletê" translation: "Anywhere Faraway". Mary Hall: New York Fashion Week: Carlos Miele's Immersive Landscape for Spring/Summer 2012
  • The only pass we knew about then was the faraway Kyber Pass.
  • Then he canted his head to the side, his expression becoming pensive, his gaze faraway. Ecstasy in Darkness
  • In a soft voice the doctor spoke his name, squeezing gently the flaccid muscle beneath his hand, as if calling him back from that faraway, inapproachable place. The Monstrumologist
  • He constantly had a faraway look in his eyes as if he was in constant direct communication with the Almighty.
  • Golf is a game of wide open spaces and, increasingly, faraway places.
  • This trilingual follow-up, fittingly, sounds like a dispatch from a faraway, enchanted land.
  • HP's wireless keyboards can transmit data to other computers in faraway buildings.
  • Nowadays, however, so-called "progressive" organizations like Democracy for America seem to care little about the fate of people of color in faraway lands. Stephen Zunes: A "Progressive Hero?" Time to Think Outside of the Boxer
  • While working full-time at the BBC, I spent about four years flying to quite faraway places to film on location.
  • Without those polarised goggles, Avatar Day would surely be an irrelevance and Avatar just another cornball sci-fi fantasy about alien monsters on a faraway planet.
  • The moon visits your chart of faraway faces and places and you know people you miss are thinking about you. The Sun
  • They stopped in faraway Frunze, in Kirgizistan, where Kaminska gave birth to her son, Victor. Esther Rachel Kaminska.
  • They have just returned from faraway places with wonderful stories to tell.
  • It featured mostly new releases, all films that in one way or another relied on narratives that explored people who were either on the move or had ended up in faraway places.
  • His eyes had a distant faraway look, like a sailor staring out to sea.
  • The bustling city makes a cosmopolitan contrast to the faraway spots visited earlier on the voyage. Times, Sunday Times
  • We shot massive action sequences in faraway places. Real-Life Spy Valerie Plame Is 'Fair Game' For New Movie
  • Marriage, and the birth of a son in 1875, did not hold him back from touring to faraway places on assignment, including the Arctic and Spain.
  • It is easier to nitpick at our own shortcomings than to fret about faraway problems. Times, Sunday Times
  • They ‘drive great distances and spend much money for the delicacy, they'll risk their lives on icy roads going to lutefisk dinners in faraway communities’.
  • "Grace, " he said, and his voice sounded faraway.
  • faraway mountains
  • A generation has grown up that knows nothing of the Shah and sees as its enemy not faraway America, but the mullahs at home who have misruled and repressed them all their lives.
  • From Brisbane, she conducts long distance ultrasounds with patients in faraway Townsville.
  • His irksome bosses at headquarters don't comprehend the risk but I guess those in faraway command are the same all over the universe.
  • A sound like Uncle Tom Cobleigh reading Neville Cardus to faraway natives", as the poet Dylan Thomas nicely put it. The day I was bowled over by John Arlott's soupy-thick vowels | Frank Keating
  • From the mambo to street stomp, dance can take you back in time to the big band era, or to faraway lands like Morocco and Brazil.
  • a faraway (or distant) look in her eyes
  • Once upon a time in a faraway land there lived a princess in a big castle.
  • There is a reason why only 6 % of his country supports our occupation of this faraway land.
  • I could image the sea reefs and gold fish swimming all set to the tone of the music of "A tonga da mironga do kabuletê" translation: "Anywhere Faraway". Mary Hall: New York Fashion Week: Carlos Miele's Immersive Landscape for Spring/Summer 2012
  • The moon reaches full power in your faraway faces and places chart and gives your life an international flavour. The Sun
  • The majority of dancers, in an attempt to obscure the reality, push this theme to some faraway corner of the brain.
  • Avis always dreamed of an exotic vacation in some faraway place.
  • I remember those nights of summer filled with magnificent beauty of faraway landscapes - but around you, my darling, I could never be able to see anything more charming.
  • the faraway future
  • While working full-time at the BBC, I spent about four years flying to quite faraway places to film on location.
  • America is prepared to fight wars in faraway lands and we should stop blindly following them. The Sun
  • Back in town, Ramona and I would sit with our coffee in the Mediterranean Caf, headquarters of the large local alternative culture, its windows full of little business cards for therapists of one persuasion or another, from ear candling to primal scream, watching this faraway other world go by. Wildwood
  • She dreamed of flying away to exotic faraway places.
  • The framed snapshots of the much loved faraway grandparents, who sent us Puffin books and matching hand-knitted cardigans, were kept in other less starchy rooms, where people might play Boggle or work their way through the VHS set of A Perfect Spy, posted out via the diplomatic bag and passed from household to expat household. A childhood on the move
  • Health and wealth link to a faraway country. The Sun
  • The introduction, however, explains that it is all part of a dream of a faraway land where Father Christmas rides in his sleigh through falling cloudberries.
  • Lilavati and Amriti did come but for his ageing parents, London was a faraway fairyland.
  • The moon visits your faraway places chart and love has an international flavour. The Sun
  • The moon in your chart of faraway faces and places shows people you miss are thinking of you. The Sun
  • Lydia smiled at her whenever she saw that faraway look on Aleena's face.
  • Fifty-four turned up along with their family members, from such faraway places as Los Angeles and Mumbai.

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