distant -
separated in space or coming from or going to a distance; "distant villages"; "the sound of distant traffic"; "a distant sound"; "a distant telephone call"
close marked by fidelity to an original; "a close translation"; "a faithful copy of the portrait"; "a faithful rendering of the observed facts"
far 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"
distance the property created by the space between two objects or points
deep exhibiting great cunning usually with secrecy; "deep political machinations"; "a deep plot"
extreme most distant in any direction; "the extreme edge of town"
far-flung remote; "far-flung corners of the Empire"
long-distance covering a long distance; "a long-distance runner"; "a long-distance freight train"; "she ran off with a long-distance truck driver"
out-of-town happening in or being of another town or city; "an out-of-town tryout"; "an out-of-town school"
distant -
far apart in relevance or relationship or kinship ; "a distant cousin"; "a remote relative"; "a distant likeness"; "considerations entirely removed (or remote) from politics"
far 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"
distant -
located far away spatially; "distant lands"; "remote stars"
far 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"
distant -
remote in manner; "stood apart with aloof dignity"; "a distant smile"; "he was upstage with strangers"