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Discover Ludwig"little far off" is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it to refer to a location that is a slight distance away. For example: "The house is a little far off, but it's worth the drive."
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This utopia seems a little far off, not least because social networks are currently geared up for inane water-cooler banter that doesn't always sit comfortably with 'serious' museum content.
Was that a little far off?
Full-on swagger might be a little far off, but the Kings had every right to be proud Thursday.
According to the press release we'll have to wait until February to find out, but that seems a little far off.
Similar(56)
Friday might just be a little too far off for some curious folks, however.
We also have a dungeon crawler, a strategy game, and a martial-arts combat game in the pipe, but those are a little too far off for us to talk about just yet.
And a fourth, realists to a man and woman, says that the future, like the past, is another country—far off and little known.
I try to follow but get trapped in the branches of some exotic tree, and by the time I've managed to extricate my little virtual limbs she's far off ahead of me, zipping round the island's cloudless air.
The look isn't too far off, just a little dryer to suit the desert location.
Mr. Gevedon recalls: "No one I knew wandered very far off from our little group.
The words were indistinct, but the music was like a transmission heard from far off in space -- little vocal jabs, sighs, murmurs and upward queries.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com