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"from far off" is a correct phrase in written English.
It means from a distance or from a faraway place. Example: "The sound of laughter could be heard from far off, signaling that the party was still going on."
Exact(31)
From far off, Khabarovsk looks nothing like the trim little community of the movie.
Of Luranah Aldridge one cannot say that she did not come from far off, as she hails — from Africa.
Rather, it focused the day's testimony like a zoom lens, starting from far off and moving in.
You can spend hours exploring it, examining paintings from far off and close up, poking around some of the world's great museums all by your lonesome.
They're painted in a way meant to hold our attention from far off and up close, and the best of them do.
The paint is handled so softly, especially in the background, that a critic of the day sniffed, "From far off one sees a bluish fog, from which six chocolate pastilles forcefully emerge".
Similar(29)
This feature can be used to eliminate potential mismatches arising from far off-resonance nuclei not detected in the TOCSY or HSQC-TOCSY experiment, but which are present in the database.
Commercial airplanes home in on skyscrapers from far-off airports.
Some of the objects were prized as exotic messengers from far-off lands.
Rather they sound like explorers returning from far-off lands, breathless with discovery.
Additionally, the potential to reduce inefficiencies that result from sending electricity from far-off power plants cannot be ignored.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com