aloof |
showing little interest in or desire to be involved with other people; distant. |
away |
distant in time or location. [1/6 definitions] |
colonize |
to establish a settlement on (a distant territory) and begin to rule. |
correspondent |
a person who reports news or contributes articles regularly to a newspaper, magazine, TV network, or the like, from a distant area. [1/2 definitions] |
far |
distant in space or time. [2/4 definitions] |
faraway |
distant or remote. [2 definitions] |
farther |
more distant; to or at a greater distance. "Farther" is a comparative form of the adjective "far." [1/2 definitions] |
farthest |
most far or distant. "Farthest" is a superlative of "far." [1/2 definitions] |
further |
more distant; to or at a greater distance. "Further" is a comparative form of the adjective "far." [1/4 definitions] |
furthest |
most distant in time or space. "Furthest" is a superlative form of the adverb "far." [1/2 definitions] |
outer |
of or having to do with the part most distant from the center. |
outlying |
away from the center of something; distant. |
recede1 |
to move away or back; become more distant. [1/2 definitions] |
sulk |
to express anger or bad humor by being silent or distant. [1/2 definitions] |
telescope |
an instrument that uses lenses and sometimes mirrors to make distant objects appear larger. |
thunder |
the loud cracking noise or low distant rumble that follows a flash of lightning. Thunder is caused by the violent movement of air masses. [1/5 definitions] |
trading post |
a store in a frontier area or other place far from towns. At a trading post, local products can be traded for goods brought from distant places. |
unfriendly |
not friendly; distant, unpleasant, or mean to other people. [1/2 definitions] |
vista |
a distant view as seen from a particular point or through an opening such as between buildings or trees. |
yonder |
(informal) somewhat distant, but within sight. [1/2 definitions] |