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Answer for the clue "More distant ", 7 letters:
farther

Alternative clues for the word farther

Word definitions for farther in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
adj. 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" [ant: near ] being of a considerable ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Farther \Far"ther\, adv. At or to a greater distance; more remotely; beyond; as, let us rest with what we have, without looking farther. Moreover; by way of progress in treating a subject; as, farther, let us consider the probable event. No farther , (used ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
15c. alteration of Middle English ferther (c.1300), a variant of further (adv.). There is no historical basis for the notion that farther is of physical distance and further of degree or quality.

Usage examples of farther.

Persian Government, General Quinan, who was commanding in Iraq, had been ordered on July 22 to be ready to occupy the oil refinery at Abadan and the oilfields, together with those two hundred and fifty miles farther north near Khanaqin.

As Adams had never been farther south than Philadelphia, Jefferson had been no farther north than New York.

The date was Tuesday, February 17, 1778, and, as Adams had no way of knowing, it marked the beginning of what would become a singular odyssey, in which he would journey farther in all, both by sea and land, than any other leader of the American cause.

In desperation Max tried to push his adaptor arm out even farther and nearly damaged himself.

Ballintubber, but they felt different: lighter, airier, with the trees spaced farther apart and well-worn paths meandering among them.

It was their intention to have proceeded farther that day, but their progress was interrupted by an affair between their Albanian guard and the primate of the village.

Back then, people were still justifiably worried about encountering hostile aliens as CST wormholes were continually opened on new planets farther and farther away from Earth.

Nadon could command it to strike, but in order to get within range of its stinging spines, Alima would have to move a couple of steps farther down the path.

Alphonse ride in silence and Alphonse watches the people getting on and off the trolley, more getting off than on as they travel farther and farther west.

Orpheus and Amphion went a little farther, and by the charms of music enchanted things merely inanimate.

There was a thud below him as the baffled cat fell back to earth, and then Tarzan of the Apes, drawing his dinner farther up to the safety of a higher limb, looked down with grinning face into the gleaming yellow eyes of the other wild beast that glared up at him from beneath, and with taunting insults flaunted the tender carcass of his kill in the face of him whom he had cheated of it.

It is easy to see that the effect of this action, which is called the revolution of the apsides, or, as the word means, the movement of the poles of the ellipse, is to bring the earth, when a given hemisphere is turned toward the sun, sometimes in the part of the orbit which is nearest the source of light and heat, and sometimes farther away.

Without precisely regretting the circumstances which had made it impossible for herself to shine farther afield than York and Scarborough, she was determined that Arabella should not be similarly circumscribed.

However, as in the case of mammoth, well-defined bison kill sites similar to those farther south have not been discovered in eastern Beringia, although a few identifiable bison remains have been found in archeological sites.

Nor are these all, For we suspect a farther fraud than this: Take off our veil, that shadows many depart, And shapes appear, beloved Arete -- So, Another face of things presents itself, Than did of late.