FARAWAY


Meaning of FARAWAY in English

far ‧ a ‧ way /ˈfɑːrəweɪ/ BrE AmE adjective

1 . [only before noun] literary a long distance away SYN distant :

She dreamed of flying away to exotic faraway places.

faraway noises

2 . a faraway look an expression on your face which shows that you are not paying attention but thinking about something very different:

His eyes had a distant faraway look, like a sailor staring out to sea.

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THESAURUS

▪ far adverb a long distance – used mainly in negatives and questions, or after ‘too’, ‘so’, and ‘as’:

It’s not far to the airport from here.

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Have you driven far?

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The ship was so far away we could hardly see it.

▪ a long way adverb a long distance from somewhere. This is the most common way of talking about long distances, except in negatives and questions when far is also common:

You must be tired – you’ve come a long way.

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It’s a long way down from the top of the cliff.

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I can’t see things that are a long way away.

▪ miles adverb informal a very long way:

We hiked miles.

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The school is miles away from where I live.

▪ in the distance adverb a long way from where you are now – used when talking about things that seem small or sounds that seem quiet because they are a long way away:

Dogs were barking somewhere in the distance.

▪ distant adjective especially written used about something that is a long distance from where you are now, and looks small or sounds quiet:

By now, the plane was just a distant speck in the sky.

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the rumble of distant thunder

▪ faraway adjective especially written a very long distance from where you are now:

a traveller from a faraway land

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His voice sounded faraway.

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He told us stories about the faraway countries he had visited.

▪ remote adjective a remote place is a long distance from other places, and few people go there:

The helicopter crashed in a remote part of the country.

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remote holiday destinations

▪ isolated adjective an isolated place is a long distance from other towns, buildings, or people, and there is very little communication with surrounding places:

isolated rural areas of Nepal

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Occasionally we passed through a small isolated village.

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If you travel to isolated areas, make sure you have a good guide.

▪ off the beaten track ( also off the beaten path American English ) adverb a place that is off the beaten track is a long distance from the places where people usually go, and often seems interesting and different because of this:

She likes to go to places that are a bit off the beaten track.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.