Associations to the word «Far»
Noun
- Away
- Horizon
- So
- Faint
- Beyond
- Nazareth
- Glimmer
- Manchuria
- Crag
- Gone
- Juliet
- Cairns
- Ras
- Hokkaido
- Til
- Larson
- Romeo
- Swing
- Speedway
- Indochina
- Forces
- Behind
- Suez
- Tribunal
- Mongolia
- Bonaparte
- Deployment
- Postcard
- Queensland
- Shipping
- Korea
- Sonny
- Pitchfork
- Orient
- Okinawa
- Wadi
- Ural
- Caucasus
- Cry
- Haze
- Enough
- Reaching
- Malaya
- Ja
- Macarthur
- Below
- Japan
- Telegraph
- Subcontinent
- Speck
- Mediterranean
- Seer
- Kern
- Korean
- Haynes
- Pickering
- Russo
- Asia
- Fleet
- Hal
- Refit
- China
- Taiwan
Adjective
Wiktionary
FAR, adjective. Remote in space.
FAR, adjective. Remote in time.
FAR, adjective. Long.
FAR, adjective. More remote or longer of two.
FAR, adjective. Extreme.
FAR, adjective. Widely different in nature or quality; opposite in character.
FAR, adjective. (computing) (not comparable) Outside the currently selected segment in a segmented memory architecture.
FAR, adverb. Distant in space, time or degree.
FAR, adverb. To or from a great distance, time, or degree.
FAR, adverb. (with a comparative) Very much.
FAR, noun. Spelt (type of wheat).
FAR, noun. A young pig, or a litter of pigs.
FAR AND AWAY, adverb. (idiomatic) By a large degree or margin; greatly.
FAR AND WIDE, adverb. (idiomatic) Over a great distance or large area; nearly everywhere.
FAR AWAY, adjective. Alternative spelling of faraway
FAR BE IT, verb. (idiomatic) A disclaimer stating that the person speaking will not do something.
FAR CRY, noun. (singulare tantum) (idiomatic) A long distance, in terms of dissimilarity or difference.
FAR CRY, adverb. Much: to a great extent or degree
FAR EAST, proper noun. East Asia (Korea, Japan, China, and the Russian Far East) and Southeast Asia, taken as a whole.
FAR EASTERN, adjective. Of or pertaining to the Far East
FAR FETCHED, adjective. Alternative spelling of far-fetched
FAR FROM, adverb. Not; not at all.
FAR LEFT, noun. The most liberal or radical part of a political or religious grouping.
FAR OFF, adjective. Alternative spelling of far-off
FAR OUT, adjective. (idiomatic) New, radical and extreme.
FAR OUT, interjection. (idiomatic) Cool; great; an expression of support, enthusiasm, or celebration.
FAR POINT, noun. The most distant point at which the eye can focus (usually infinity, but nearer for a myopic eye).
FAR POINT, noun. (figurative) The most distant point under consideration in any situation.
FAR POINTS, noun. Plural of far point
FAR POST, noun. (soccer) (idiomatic) The goalpost furthest from where a cross is made.
FAR RIGHT, noun. The most conservative or reactionary part of a political or religious grouping.
FAR SIGHT, noun. Farsightedness
Dictionary definition
FAR, noun. A terrorist organization that seeks to overthrow the government dominated by Tutsi and to institute Hutu control again; "in 1999 ALIR guerrillas kidnapped and killed eight foreign tourists".
FAR, adverb. To a considerable degree; very much; "a far far better thing that I do"; "felt far worse than yesterday"; "eyes far too close together".
FAR, adverb. At or to or from a great distance in space; "he traveled far"; "strayed far from home"; "sat far away from each other".
FAR, adverb. At or to a certain point or degree; "I can only go so far before I have to give up"; "how far can we get with this kind of argument?".
FAR, adverb. Remote in time; "if we could see far into the future"; "all that happened far in the past".
FAR, adverb. To an advanced stage or point; "a young man who will go very far".
FAR, adjective. Located at a great distance in time or space or degree; "we come from a far country"; "far corners of the earth"; "the far future"; "a far journey"; "the far side of the road"; "far from the truth"; "far in the future".
FAR, adjective. Being of a considerable distance or length; "a far trek".
FAR, adjective. Being the animal or vehicle on the right or being on the right side of an animal or vehicle; "the horse on the right is the far horse"; "the right side is the far side of the horse".
FAR, adjective. Beyond a norm in opinion or actions; "the far right".
Wise words
The chief virtue that language can have is clearness, and
nothing detracts from it so much as the use of unfamiliar
words.