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2 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
from afar
從遠處
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
From
prep.
Out
of
the
neighborhood
of
;
lessening
or
losing
proximity
to
;
leaving
behind
;
by
reason
of
;
out
of
;
by
aid
of
; --
used
whenever
departure
,
setting
out
,
commencement
of
action
,
being
,
state
,
occurrence
,
etc
.,
or
procedure
,
emanation
,
absence
,
separation
,
etc
.,
are
to
be
expressed
.
It
is
construed
with
,
and
indicates
,
the
point
of
space
or
time
at
which
the
action
,
state
,
etc
.,
are
regarded
as
setting
out
or
beginning
;
also
,
less
frequently
,
the
source
,
the
cause
,
the
occasion
,
out
of
which
anything
proceeds
; --
the
antithesis
and
correlative
of
to
;
as
,
it
,
is
one
hundred
miles
from
Boston
to
Springfield
;
he
took
his
sword
from
his
side
;
light
proceeds
from
the
sun
;
separate
the
coarse
wool
from
the
fine
;
men
have
all
sprung
from
Adam
,
and
often
go
from
good
to
bad
,
and
from
bad
to
worse
;
the
merit
of
an
action
depends
on
the
principle
from
which
it
proceeds
;
men
judge
of
facts
from
personal
knowledge
,
or
from
testimony
.
Experience
from
the
time
past
to
the
time
present
.
--
Bacon
.
The
song
began
from
Jove
.
--
Drpden
.
From
high
Mæonia's
rocky
shores
I
came
.
--
Addison
.
If
the
wind
blow
any
way
from
shore
.
--
Shak
.
Note:
☞
From
sometimes
denotes
away
from
,
remote
from
,
inconsistent
with
.
“Anything
so
overdone
is
from
the
purpose
of
playing.”
--
Shak
.
From
,
when
joined
with
another
preposition
or
an
adverb
,
gives
an
opportunity
for
abbreviating
the
sentence
.
“There
followed
him
great
multitudes
of
people
. . .
from
[
the
land
]
beyond
Jordan.”
--
Math
.
iv
. 25.
In
certain
constructions
,
as
from
forth
,
from
out
,
etc
.,
the
ordinary
and
more
obvious
arrangment
is
inverted
,
the
sense
being
more
distinctly
forth
from
,
out
from
--
from
being
virtually
the
governing
preposition
,
and
the
word
the
adverb
.
See
From off
,
under
Off
,
adv.
,
and
From afar
,
under
Afar
,
adv.
Sudden
partings
such
as
press
The
life
from out
young
hearts
. --
Byron
.
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