Exact(2)
He refuses to work farther from home than he can comfortably carry his ladder.
Those who work farther from home are more likely to commute by car.
Similar(56)
There's overwhelming evidence that open offices are associated with lower job satisfaction; poorer interpersonal relations; worse concentration and creativity; damaged sleep, thanks to people working farther from windows; and more sickness, due to the potential for infection.
Slowly work farther and farther away from the mare.
"Because of the narrow shape of Manhattan, the city grew north and people ended up working farther and farther from home," explained Arthur Schwartz, a radio host and former food editor at The Daily News who is writing a history of eating in New York.
But as the canvassing board worked farther south, encountering votes from more Democratic precincts, the Republicans became much more agitated and questioned the board's standards on the dimpled ballots.
None worked farther than 5 feet away, though.
Blandino's newer floral works step even farther from naturalistic homage with plastic, electric background hues that barely stay put behind flowers that jump up and out of their four corners as if on fire, captured like gorgeous phoenixes.
Or, imagine being able to sleep while commuting to work; might this encourage increased sprawl as people choose to live farther and farther from work?
Another footprint of financial distress is long commute times, because families who are short on cash often try to make ends meet by moving to where housing is cheaper — in many cases, farther from work.
As Afrikaner governments pushed blacks into townships outside of cities or onto remote reservations, slivers of land far from their fertile farming grounds, young black men turned to work that took them farther from home, in mining and other industries that relied on migrant labor.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com