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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a far off memory" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a memory that feels distant or not easily recalled, often evoking a sense of nostalgia.
Example: "As I walked through the old neighborhood, I was flooded with a far off memory of my childhood adventures."
Alternatives: "a distant memory" or "a long-ago memory."
Exact(1)
"The idea of getting back into work isn't such a far off memory.
Similar(59)
Seal's face softened as though recalling a far-off memory.
A far off land.
To a far off Lyn called Brook.
Her eyes, a bright bluish-green, take on a far-off look when she recalls the memory, as though it's too painful.
Everywhere the couple turns, the home brings warm memories of a far-off place.
The images emerge, like chemical memories, from a far-off or sometimes not-so-distant past: an aerial view of a fruit cart, a corner of the stage at CBGB, industrial ruins, a deliveryman in Chinatown, Brooklyn fog.
Yet the story remains a gripping one: the shadowy world of ex-Nazis hiding away in a far-off continent, Germany's own struggle of memory against forgetting, and a young country's clamorous desire for justice.
That is still a far-off prospect.
That's a far-off target.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com