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单词 distance
释义

distancen.

Brit. /ˈdɪst(ə)ns/, U.S. /ˈdɪst(ə)ns/
Forms:

α. Middle English–1500s destaunce, Middle English–1600s destance; Scottish 1900s– desstance (Orkney).

β. Middle English distawnce, Middle English distawns, Middle English dystawnce, Middle English–1500s distans, Middle English–1500s distauns, Middle English–1500s dystans, Middle English–1500s dystaunce, Middle English–1600s distaunce, Middle English–1600s dystance, Middle English– distance, 1500s dystauns, 1600s distanse; Scottish pre-1700 distans, pre-1700 distantis, pre-1700 distaunce, pre-1700 distawns, pre-1700 dystawns, pre-1700 1700s– distance.

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French distance; Latin distantia.
Etymology: < (i) Anglo-Norman and Old French destance, destaunce, distaunce, Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French distance (French distance ) discord, quarrel (late 12th cent.), dispute, debate (late 13th cent.), fact of being apart in space or time, extent of separation, difference, distinction (all 13th cent.), and its etymon (ii) classical Latin distantia fact of being apart in space, extent of separation, remoteness, musical interval, difference, diversity, in post-classical Latin also distinction (Vulgate), opening, gap (5th cent.), discrepancy, disagreement (8th cent. in a British source), dissension (from 12th cent. in British and continental sources), fact of being apart in time (13th cent. in British sources) < distant- , distāns distant adj. + -ia -ia suffix1.Compare Spanish distancia (late 14th cent.), Portuguese distância (15th cent.), Italian distanza (late 13th cent.); also Middle Dutch distancie, distantie (Dutch distantie), German Distanz (late 15th cent. as distancz).
I. Disagreement, conflict, and related senses.
1.
a. A dispute, a quarrel, a disagreement; a controversy; (later in weakened use) an estrangement. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > [noun] > state or instance of
distancec1300
differencea1387
variancec1425
different?1483
differinga1525
displeasure1550
differ1566
distaste1621
disgusta1665
disaccommodationa1676
differency1707
fallout1725
collision1839
upset1887
contretemps1961
c1300 St. Thomas Becket (Laud) l. 1267 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 142 A destaunce þare is i-sproungue liȝtliche in Engelonde, Þat destourbez al þat lond.
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) l. 4585 Sche him teld anon..alle þe destaunce whi & wharfore Arthours deþ þai hadden yswore.
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) iii. l. 1914 He tolde hem pleynli off a gret distaunce..and a discencioun That was off newe falle in Rome toun.
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) iv. l. 3295 Atween hym & kyng Lysymachus..Began a werre & a gret distaunce.
1650 N. Ward Discolliminium 30 It would allay and heale many great distances, and procure many..friends.
?1806 R. B. Sheridan Let. in W. A. Darlington Sheridan: Biogr. (1966) II. 271 There has always been a distance not to say dislike between him and Grey.
b. The fact or condition of being in dispute or disagreement with another; discord, dissension. Later in weakened use: the fact of no longer being close to or friendly with someone; estrangement. Cf. without distance at Phrases 1d. Obsolete.After 1600, passing into the sense of ‘estrangement, coolness’; cf. sense 11.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > [noun]
unsibeOE
unsaughta1122
un-i-sibc1275
conteckc1290
discordingc1325
distancec1325
discordance1340
dissensionc1384
batea1400
discordc1425
variancec1425
variationc1485
disgreement?1504
distinction1520
factiona1538
jar1546
variety1546
disagreeance1548
disagreeing1548
disagreement1548
misliking1564
odds1567
mislikea1586
discordancy1587
disagree1589
distancy1595
dissent1596
dislike1598
secting1598
dichostasy1606
fraction1609
dissentation1623
ill blood1624
misintelligence1632
clashing1642
misunderstanding1642
discomposure1659
disjointinga1715
uneasiness1744
friction1760
misunderstand1819
unharmony1866
inharmony1867
trouble at (the or t') mill1967
the mind > attention and judgement > testing > debate, disputation, argument > controversy, dispute, argument > [noun]
pleac1275
distancec1325
stance14..
in controversyc1432
disceptation1447
disputation1489
disception1492
concertation1509
controversity1528
contending1561
fending and proving1583
digladiation?1591
bandying1599
contestation1602
controverting1610
wrangling1612
contesting1616
rixation1623
contestion1632
controversarya1635
contest1642
vitilitigation1647
ergoteering1687
sparring1755
hash1789
controversying1865
argle-bargle1872
wringle-wrangle1882
argy-bargy1887
polemicizing1948
va-et-vient1959
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) l. 10533 Þe barons sende to þe king philip of france, Þat he hom sende socour in þis luþer destance.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) viii. l. 2200 And thus we fellen in distance, Mi Prest and I.
c1400 Brut (Rawl. B. 171) 217 We shul be holde traitoures, for cause of distaunce þat is bituene Kyng Edward and Robert þe Brus.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) iii. i. 117 In such bloody distance, That euery minute of his being, thrusts Against my neer'st of Life.
1667 S. Pepys Diary 10 Sept. (1974) VIII. 431 This..doth breed a kind of inward distance between the King and the Duke of York.
1752 H. Fielding Amelia I. ii. ii. 108 There was some little Distance between them, which I hoped to have the Happiness of accommodating.
1852 J. Gilbert Christian Atonement 18 Declarations of distance, disagreement, want of friendly intercourse, and even opposition between men.
2. Armed conflict; warfare; rebellion. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
c1330 (?a1300) Guy of Warwick (Auch.) p. 458 Mani he slouȝ..In batayle & in destaunce.
a1500 (?c1400) Sir Triamour (Cambr.) (1937) l. 1017 And let owre londys be in pees, Wythowtyn any dystawnce.
1543 ( Chron. J. Hardyng (1812) 287 In Wales Morgan made war & great distaunce.
3. Great trouble or suffering; tribulation, affliction. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
c1390 in Englische Studien (1877) 1 48 So longe was Teophele in destaunce [a1425 Harl. 4196 care], in gret trauayle and penaunce.
a1450 Partonope of Blois (Univ. Coll. Oxf.) (1912) l. 3723 (MED) I calde yow to tell what perell We stande in, and in what dystaunce.
II. The extent of space between two places or objects, and related senses.
4. The extent or space of time between two events; an interval, an intervening period. In early use often in without distance (see Phrases 1d(a)); now frequently in adverbial phrases indicating remoteness in time, e.g. at this distance, (more fully) at this distance of time. Cf. also sense 13c.In later use, esp. in distance of time, typically understood as a figurative or extended use of sense 5a (cf. sense 8).
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > [noun] > stretch, period, or portion of time > period of time between events or interval
waya1300
distancec1330
interstition1390
spacea1400
pastimea1513
vacance1533
intermission?1566
vacation1567
intervallum1574
interim1579
between-timea1586
wem1599
parenthesis1600
intermedium1611
betweena1616
fore-while?1615
interpolation1615
vacancya1616
interval1616
interstitium1624
slatcha1625
interspace1629
intermissa1633
between-spacea1641
interregnum1659
intervalea1661
interlapse1666
interlude1751
in-between1815
lapse1817
intermezzo1851
meanwhile1872
c1330 Short Metrical Chron. (Auch.) l. 915 in PMLA (1931) 46 128/2 Anon wiþ outen ani destaunce, He told þe king of his meschaunce.
c1450 (c1380) G. Chaucer House of Fame (Fairf. 16) (1878) l. 18 To knowe..neyther the distaunce Of tymes of hem.
1657 A. Sparrow Rationale Bk. Common Prayer (new ed.) 244 The Communion-Service is to be some good distance after the Morn. Service.
1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) 404 From the Date of the Mosaic Law to the Prophecy of Ezekiel, there's a distance of 900 Years.
a1777 S. Foote Cozeners (1778) iii. i. 64 Take this draught, three times a-day, at two hours, distance.
1820 W. Scoresby Acct. Arctic Regions I. 43 At the distance of eighteen to thirty years, from the time when the several navigations were performed.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 455 An apprehension not to be mentioned, even at this distance of time, without shame and indignation.
1872 J. Morley Voltaire iv. 161 The connection may be seen at our distance of time to have been marked and unmistakable.
1984 R. Dahl Boy 24 I do have a blurred memory of..trying..to tie one of my shoelaces, but that is all that comes back to me at this distance of the school itself.
2021 Epoch Times (N.Y.) 30 Mar. a13 At this distance of time, we will probably never know what really happened on election night(s) in Georgia.
5.
a. The extent or amount of space between any two points; the length of space that must be traversed in order to get from one place or thing to another; (as a count noun) an instance of this, an intervening space between two points, things, or places.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > distance > [noun]
spacec1350
distancec1392
farness1523
remove1628
eloinmenta1670
the world > space > [noun] > intervening space
spacec1350
interspacec1420
interval1489
distance1559
intervacuuma1633
vacuity1658
intervale1683
c1392 Equatorie of Planetis 24 (MED) Tak thanne by thy large compas the distaunce by twixe centre aryn & the closere of the signes.
?c1400 in J. O. Halliwell Rara Mathematica (1839) 58 (MED) Þan mesure þe distaunce, þat es to say, þe space betwene ye and þat thyng whos heght you sekes.
a1542 T. Wyatt Coll. Poems (1969) 79 When I thinke apon the distance and the space That doth so ferr devid me from my dere desird face.
1559 W. Cuningham Cosmogr. Glasse 10 The sterres kepe one uniforme distance in moving.
1663 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders 34 A Head [consists] of so many distances between the one Eye and the other.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding ii. xiii. 75 This Space considered barely in length between any two Beings, without considering any thing else between them, is called distance.
1712 J. James tr. A.-J. Dézallier d'Argenville Theory & Pract. Gardening 160 The Plants are spaced out..at three Foot Distances.
1785 W. Nicholson Descr. of New Instrument 8 The length of the stem is arbitrary, as is likewise the distance of the lower scale from the surface of the globe.
1868 J. N. Lockyer Elem. Lessons Astron. ii. 38 Astronomers now know the distance of the Sun from the Earth.
1882 E. M. Lawson Stories for Our Village 58 Just then old Susan, shading her eyes, looked up the avenue, and, with careful measure of time and distance,..made the descent of the three doorsteps.
1964 L. Van der Post Lost World Kalahari vii. 142 I reckoned the distance was a hundred and fifty yards.
2018 New Scientist 15 Dec. 40/1 Monarch butterflies, leatherback turtles, honeybees, Atlantic salmon and migratory birds are able to sense Earth's magnetic field.., helping them cover vast distances with unerring accuracy.
2020 Herald-Times (Bloomington, Indiana) 3 Oct. c3/1 Waves reached at least 35 feet in height but the distance between wave tops was much shorter.
b. In various technical contexts: the extent of the space separating a particular point, object, etc., from another, or such separation measured in a particular way. Frequently with modifying word.angular distance, braking distance, focal distance, meridian distance, polar distance, zenith distance, etc.: see the first element.
ΚΠ
a1400 ( G. Chaucer Treat. Astrolabe (St. John's Cambr. E. 2) (1872) ii. §22. 32 The latitude of any place in a regioun is the distance fro the senyth vnto the Equinoxial.
1556 R. Record Castle of Knowl. 176 So doo they call the motion of them [sc. the Planetes] in Longitude, theyr distaunce by theyr naturall course from the beginninge of Aries.
1696 E. Phillips New World of Words (new ed.) Distance..in Navigation..signifies the number of Degrees, Leagues, &c., that a Ship has sail'd from any purposed point; or the Distance in Degrees, Leagues, &c., of any two Places.
1739 Philos. Trans. 1737–8 (Royal Soc.) 40 220 The Perihelian Distance..is many times less than the Semi-distance of the Foci.
1819 J. Wilson Compl. Dict. Astrol. 81 The distance of any place is found by subtracting the ascension of the preceding part, or its descension, from that of the succeeding part.
1832 Nat. Philos. (Libr. Useful Knowl.) II. Electricity vi. §87. 23 The distance between the conducting bodies requisite for the transfer of electricity through the air, or what is termed the striking distance.
1948 A. L. Rawlings Sci. Clocks & Watches (ed. 2) ix. 163 The radius of the lever is generally about three and a half times the radial distance from the center of the balance to the flat face of the pin.
2004 Prediction Apr. 44/1 A Lunar aspect is a specific distance, measured in degrees, between the Moon and a planet.
c. In adverbial phrases indicating a given extent (either generally or as an exact measurement), with distance modified by a preceding adjective, noun, or genitive.
(a) In prepositional phrases. See also Phrases 1.
ΚΠ
?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (N.Y. Acad. Med.) f. 17 (MED) Chest of þe galle..haþ 2 holez or neckez oned togider at som litel distaunce.
c1475 (?c1451) Bk. Noblesse (Royal) (1860) 70 Whiche gardins were so proporcionallie in a convenient distaunce sett and planted withe treis of verdure of divers fructis..that it was the joieust and plesaunt sighte.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende f. cccxx/2 The mone was thenne fro the sonne, & was xv dayes old, and soo was in a parfyght distaunce fro the sonne.
1485 W. Caxton tr. Lyf St. Wenefryde sig. biiii The place where so moche tresour was reteyned is a chirche yerde of a good distaunce fro the chircheyerd where now the bodyes of dede men ben buryed.
1563 W. Fulke Goodle Gallerye Causes Meteors iii. f. 42 Not..to far of..neither yet to neare..but in a competent & midle distance.
1570 H. Billingsley tr. Euclid Elements Geom. sig. b.jv Supposeth walles parallels, to approche, a farre of: rofe and floure parallels, the one to bend downward, the other to rise vpward, at a little distance from you.
1638 T. Herbert Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 52 The Distoore and other Lay-men (at 12 foot distance) surround the holy Diety.
1713 J. Addison in Guardian 22 Sept. 2/1 At about a Mile's Distance from the black Temple.
c1790 J. Willock Voy. diverse parts 305 At a safe distance from the scene of action.
1845 M. Pattison in Christian Remembrancer Jan. 77 At no great distance from the City Island.
1944 W. S. Maughan Razor's Edge v. 168 Isabel, Gray, Larry and I went for excursions to places of interest within convenient distance.
2008 Sci. Amer. (U.K. ed.) Sept. 6/1 At a certain distance from the star is a ‘snow line’ beyond which water stays frozen.
(b) In noun phrases used adverbially, frequently with prepositional phrase or adverb as a complement.
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a1438 Bk. Margery Kempe (1940) i. 192 (MED) Sche sey hem takyn vp þe Crosse..& lyftyd it vp fro þe erthe a certeyn distawnce.
1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry ii. f. 98 Take heede..that your trees stand a good distance a sunder.
1584 A. Barlow in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations 731 Our boates side, in which wee laye all night, remouing the same a pretie distance from the shoare.
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iv. i. 224 Pleaseth your Lordship To meet his grace iust distance tweene our armies? View more context for this quotation
1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World v. 116 A Rock a good distance from the shore.
a1719 J. Addison in Wks. (1888) III. 7 He lived but a few miles distance from her father's house.
1792 Gentleman's Mag. 13/2 The bridge..is some little distance from the main street.
1852 W. B. Dewees & ‘C. Cardelle’ Lett. from Early Settler Texas 226 As it chanced there was a hay-cutter, who was at work a short distance from where the scene took place.
1938 L. Charteris in O. Penzler Black Lizard Big Bk. of Pulps (2007) 463/1 Blam! Simon heard the spang of the bullet some distance from him, and more glass shattered.
2014 S. Barnes Ten Million Aliens 293 Just a short distance from my hut is a patch of open water where I can see 500 wintering wigeons.
d. Fencing. The gap between a fencer and his or her opponent, the extent of which the fencer attempts to control in order to gain an advantage over the opponent; = measure n. 8d.
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1595 V. Saviolo Practise i. f. 17 You must obserue iust distance, which is, when either of you stand in such place, that stepping forward a little, you maye reache one another.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) ii. i. 211 In these times you stand on distance: your Passes, Stoccado's, and I know not what. View more context for this quotation
1684 R. Howlett School Recreat. 74 Being within Distance, approach with your first Motion.
1785 D. Angelo School of Fencing 44 Thrusting against the wall accustoms the scholar to thrust with quickness..; it gives an exactness and ease, as well as a knowledge of distance.
1890 W. H. Pollock et al. Fencing (ed. 2) vi. 104 It is indispensable, by way of precaution against surprise, to come on guard out of distance.
1975 M. Nelson & R. Reiff Winning Fencing ix. 82 In judging the distance, you must consider your opponent's speed, his height, his looseness in covering ground... The complete fencer must control the distance.
2013 P. Terminiello & J. Pendragon tr. N. Giganti ‘Lost’ Second Bk. 95 The method of defending against a pass of the left foot, at distance using a counter-disengage.
e. Military. The space between adjacent troops standing or marching in rank; (also) the space between the ranks. Also used analogously of cavalry.
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1635 W. Barriffe Mil. Discipline vi. 20 Distance is the space of ground between man and man, either in File or Ranke.
1690 S. Sewall Diary 24 Mar. (1973) I. 255 I goe into the field, pray with the South Company, Exercise them in a few Distances, Facings, Doublings.
1728 Exercise for Horse, Dragoon, & Foot Forces 7 The several Distances between the Ranks are, Open Order, Order, Close Order, and Close to the Croop.
1833 Regulations Instr. Cavalry i. iv. 122 The Files Prove distance as directed.
1859 F. A. Griffiths Artillerist's Man. (1862) 16 Open to quarter (or wheeling) distance from the front.
1968 H. C. B. Rogers Battles & Generals of Civil Wars ii. 29 On the beat for a ‘March’ men shouldered their arms and increased their distance to six feet between ranks.
1992 Drill & Ceremonies: Training (U.S. Dept. Air Force) 27 Everyone except the guide adjusts by taking small choppy steps..and establishes dress, cover, interval, and distance.
f. Boxing. The maximum range at which a boxer can land an effective punch.
ΚΠ
1805 Sporting Mag. Dec. 130/1 He [sc. a boxer] was an excellent judge of his distance.
1808 Sporting Mag. 32 35/2 Belcher, within distance, hit him a severe facer.
1888 F. W. J. Henning Recoll. Prize Ring 44 At last Rooke got within distance and lashed out his left, catching Joe an ugly one on the ear.
1952 Daily Tel. (Sydney) 14 Feb. 22/6 Although he showed all his old fire, most of his punches were woefully out of distance.
2011 J. McMillan Alternative View Boxers Rec. 82 He was hesitant and he was punching short and out of distance.
6.
a. The region that lies a long way off; the more remote part of what the eye can see or (by extension) the ears hear, etc. Chiefly with the, esp. in in the distance, (also) into the distance.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > distance > distance or farness > a long way off [phrase]
at distancea1425
in the distance?a1439
far to seek?1544
at a distance1697
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) i. l. 5604 He lokid aboute [among] the rokkis alle And sauh nothyng beside nor in distaunce.
1551 S. Gardiner Explic. Catholique Fayth f. 37 Howsoeuer the sonne aboue in the distaunce appereth vnto vs of an other sorte, yet the beames that touche the yerth, be of the same substaunce with it.
1794 J. Stuart & N. Revett Antiq. Athens 15 The mountains in the distance were called anciently Coryddalus, but at present Daphne.
1813 P. B. Shelley Queen Mab ii. 21 There was a little light That twinkled in the misty distance.
1847 Ld. Tennyson Princess iv. 68 A trumpet in the distance pealing news.
1891 W. E. Gladstone in Daily News 28 Jan. 3/3 Viewed now, calmly, in the light of the golden distance.
1960 C. Day Lewis Buried Day ii. 35 A bicycle-bell rings in the distance.
2018 P. Kimani Dance of Jakaranda v. 103 They were on the move again, with Nahodha peering into the distance through his binoculars.
b. The more remote part of a landscape, scene, or view, as contrasted with the foreground; the part of a picture representing this.See also middle distance n. 1.
ΚΠ
1706 B. Buckeridge Ess. Eng. School in J. Savage tr. R. de Piles Art of Painting 475 Accustom'd himself to take in a large Extent of Hills and Distance.
1791 W. Gilpin Remarks Forest Scenery II. 233 The painter asserts, that an extensive distance, exactly painted, tho in miniature, will affect the spectator like the natural scene.
1861 G. W. Thornbury Life J. M. W. Turner I. 89 His distances were low, and his trees ill-formed.
1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake I. Prel. 18 Dark and sad..autumn days, when all the distances were shut off.
1923 D. R. Augsburg ABC of Color ii. 26 When dry, add a little more color, stir well, and paint the distance, middle distance and foreground.
2007 H. Hole Madsen Hartley & West ii. 30 The pastel is structured around the contrast between distance and foreground.
c. A point or position that is far away. Chiefly in from a distance.
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1709 G. Berkeley Ess. New Theory of Vision 79 When from a Distance (I speak with the Vulgar) we behold great Objects, the Particles of the intermediate Air and Vapours..do interrupt the Rays of Light.
1782 W. Cowper Progress of Error in Poems 202 Viewed from a distance..Folly and Innocence are so alike.
c1790 J. Willock Voy. diverse parts 316 I found I was unable to walk to any distance.
1839 C. Darwin in R. Fitzroy & C. Darwin Narr. Surv. Voy. H.M.S. Adventure & Beagle III. i. 8 The rocks of St. Paul appear from a distance of a brilliantly white colour.
1896 Argosy Mar. 521/2 The general contour of the city's sky lines as seen from a distance.
1917 Ceylon Blue Bk. 1916 29 The excreta removed to a distance twice daily and buried in trenches twice a day.
1937 Life 16 Aug. 52/2 (caption) The operator blows from a distance to avoid inhaling the dangerous radon fumes.
2017 E. Bucar Pious Fashion Introd. 15 It can be hard to tell, especially from a distance, if the fabric is an expensive silk crepe or a cheap polyester blend.
7. The state or condition of being separate or apart from something, esp. by a long way; the state or condition of being far off; remoteness.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > distance > distance or farness > [noun]
farness1398
remotionc1425
distance1440
longinquityc1550
distancy1597
remoteness1607
removednessa1616
elongation1616
far-offness1873
far-awayness1888
1440 J. Capgrave Life St. Norbert (1977) 1636 Whan þei had considered..þe long distaunce Of any good soyle.
a1500 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Nero) i. l. 1202 Alpes, þat ar hillis hie Departande Italy fra Frawnsse, [Be] marchis, meris and distans.
1661 E. Hickeringill Jamaica Viewed (ed. 2) 54 Distance and absence usually enhanceth the affections of near friends.
1711 A. Pope Ess. Crit. 12 Which..Due Distance reconciles to Form and Grace.
a1822 P. B. Shelley Let. to — in Posthumous Poems (1824) 68 Afar the Contadino's song is heard, Rude, but made sweet by distance.
1939 Eccl. Rev. Jan. 25 Distance makes it inevitable that the children living far from it [sc. the school], will not attend it.
2001 L. W. Karsner Long Distance Romance Guide 17 Distance makes it easy to perpetuate a fantasy.
8. Remoteness, or degree of separatedness, in kinship, likeness, allusion, or other relationship which is not spatial or temporal. Cf. distant adj. 6.
ΚΠ
c1443 R. Pecock Reule of Crysten Religioun (1927) 432 Þe feiþ which adam receyued fro þin aungel..descendid into his children and into her children þoruȝ a fer distaunce in lyne of descense.
1580 J. Field tr. T. de Bèze Other Parte Christian Questions & Answeares sig. **5v The reall distance of the substances of the signe and things signified, doth not make frustrate the Sacramentes.
a1715 Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time (1724) I. 227 They did it at so great a distance, that..there was no danger of misprision of treason.
1871 B. Stewart Heat (ed. 2) §301 Some [substances] being near their melting-points, others at a great distance from them.
1875 H. J. S. Maine Lect. Early Hist. Inst. ii. 30 The mistake..I conceive to have been an effect of mental distance.
1979 J. Wainwright Brainwash xxxix. 166 The distance from a denial to a confession is a long and tiring journey.
2004 W. E. Paden in P. Antes et al. New Approaches to Study of Relig. II. v. 85 Comparability, then, means closeness or distance of resemblance to the prototype.
9. Music. The difference in pitch between two sounds; an interval. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > interval > [noun]
distance1551
interval1609
discord1654
decima1808
1551 R. Robinson tr. T. More Vtopia sig. Mviv Nother perceaueth the concordaunt and discordante distaunces of soundes [L. sonorum distantias], and tunes.
1684 R. Howlett School Recreat. 120 Two lesser Distances..named Semitones.
1797 Monthly Mag. 3 226 They exhibit the author as straining after novelty by eccentric distances, and by movements out of cathedral time.
10. The extent of something from end to end; length. Cf. distance of the bastion n. at Phrases 4a. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > longitudinal extent > [noun]
lenghc888
longnessOE
length1154
dimension1413
sideness1422
longitude?a1425
prolixity?a1425
distance1582
longity1604
distent1613
protension1704
sidth1831
1582 N. Lichefield tr. F. L. de Castanheda 1st Bk. Hist. Discouerie E. Indias xxix. 72 b Whether it were a firme lande, as it did appeare..by the great distance of the Coast that they had found.
11.
a. Avoidance of closeness, warmth, or undue familiarity in relationships or interactions between people.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > lack of social communication or relations > separation or isolation > [noun] > detachment or non-participation
distance1609
aloofness1639
distantness1731
non-participation1832
detachment1862
awayness1936
1609 W. Shakespeare Louers Complaint in Sonnets sig. L She..kept cold distance, and did thence remoue, To spend her liuing in eternall loue.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1622) iii. iii. 13 He shall in strangest, stand no farther off, Then in a politique distance . View more context for this quotation
1678 J. Davies tr. M. de Scudéry Clelia (new ed.) iii. ii. 287/2 He observed such a respectful distance towards her, that she had not the least occasion to complain of him.
1791 C. Reeve School for Widows I. v. 184 I was rather constrained in my behaviour, and kept them at a polite distance.
1895 All Year Round 12 Jan. 29/1 An indescribeable aloofness, which placed an immeasurable and icy distance between herself and the two whose society she seemed tacitly to court.
1983 E. Reveley In Good Faith xiii. 210 A certain distance had to be maintained and he kept his own voice deliberately cool.
2002 Time Out N.Y. 31 Oct. 83/2 How do you maintain professional distance as you are drawn into the story?
b. Coldness or excessive reserve in a person's manner, behaviour, or attitude; avoidance of familiarity; aloofness, stand-offishness.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > discourtesy > [noun] > lack of affability
strangenessc1386
unhomelinessc1440
fremdnessa1500
coldness1557
coolnessa1586
self-guarda1586
diskindness1596
formality1599
reservedness1606
inaffability1611
restrainta1616
unconess1637
chillness1639
froideur1645
distance1660
starchedness1670
buckram1682
starchness?1693
starch1694
reserve1711
stiffness1717
unapproachableness1727
retirement1803
angularity1824
standoffishness1826
distancy1836
chill1837
starchiness1844
unapproachability1846
hedgehogginess1858
standoff1865
offishness1867
aloofness1878
pokerishness1880
untouchableness1909
untouchability1919
stuffiness1926
1660 F. Brooke tr. V. Le Blanc World Surveyed 294 He was a benigne and courteous Prince, affectionate..without state or distance [Fr. sans grandeur & grauité].
1738 D. Neal Hist. Puritans IV. 88 To let them see how little he valued those distances he was bound to observe for form sake with others.
1766 J. Orton Mem. P. Doddridge viii. 203 He had contracted nothing of that moroseness and distance.
1817 J. Mill Hist. Brit. India II. v. vii. 620 They put on the forms of distance; and stood upon elevated terms.
1853 Arthur's Home Mag. Oct. 263/1 It was chiefly on account of her distance and superciliousness that she was and is still called Patience, instead of Mrs. Worthington.
1907 J. R. McMahon Toilers & Idlers xxiv. 177 The distance and reserve faded from the old man's eyes.
2004 G. Knight Comity (e-book, accessed 2 Sept. 2021) xvi. 63 There was both warmth and distance about her.
c. An attitude of deference or respect. Usually with to, towards. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > respect > [noun]
worthingeOE
respitea1382
honoura1425
respect1526
respection1528
regardfulness1571
respectiveness1608
modesty1616
respectfulness1625
deferencea1660
distance1667
respectance1820
unscornfulness1840
fealty1867
obsequiosity1878
deferentiality1880
1667 J. Dryden Indian Emperour i. ii. 4 I hope your modesty Will know, what distance to the Crown is due.
1689 G. Bulkeley People's Right to Election in Andros Tracts (1869) II. 107 The Government expects to be treated with more Distance & Difference.
1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) 287 I'll observe the respect and distance that's due to him from his Scholar.
1742 H. Fielding Joseph Andrews I. i. viii. 46 Slipslop..had preserved hitherto a Distance to her Lady. View more context for this quotation
1818 W. Scott Rob Roy I. v. 75 It is not to be thought that..a young man of two-and-twenty was likely to be severely critical on a beautiful girl of eighteen, for not observing a proper distance towards him.
12. The sphere or firmament to which an important person belongs. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social class > [noun]
estatec1230
statec1300
rowa1350
qualityc1425
calling1477
range1494
line1528
stature1533
respect1601
station1603
gradationa1616
ordinancea1616
repute1615
spherea1616
distance1635
impression1639
civils1650
footing1657
regimen1660
order1667
sect1709
caste1791
status1818
position1829
social status1833
standpoint1875
1635 To Countesse of Huntington in J. Donne Poems (rev. ed.) 191 These (Madame) that without your distance lie, Must either mist, or nothing seeme to be.
1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. viii. 23 I am not satisfied in what distance properly to place these persons. Some..will account it too high, to rank them amongst Martyrs; and surely, I conceive it too low, to esteem them but bare Confessours.
13.
a. Horse Racing.
(a) Originally: the distance from the winning post which a horse running in a heat race must have reached when the winner finishes in order to qualify for a subsequent heat; (with the) this point on the course, at which the distance judge was positioned (see Compounds 3). Now conventionally: the point on a racecourse 240 yards from the winning post.In Britain and the British Empire (e.g. in Australia, New Zealand, and Hong Kong) the use relating to heat races had passed into the more conventional use by the second half of the 19th cent., but the original use continued into the 20th cent. in the United States, esp. in harness racing.
ΚΠ
1662 Articles Duke of Newcastle's New Course (single sheet) Another Gentleman must be appointed at the Twelve-score-stoup, to judge what Horse is rid out of distance, which is a main businesse.
1665 in J. P. Hore Hist. Newmarket (1886) II. xi. 247 If any horse, mare, or gelding, shall fall by any mischance, so that the rider be dismounted, and if does his best afterwards to get within distance, and ride fair (which shall be determined by the Judges of the Field) he shall only lose the heat.
1723 London Gaz. No. 6172/4 The Horse..that wins two Heats and saves his Distance a third too, wins the Plate.
1838 Sporting Mag. Oct. 444 The Countess..went away at a good rattling pace, with the black waiting upon her very politely until they reached the distance, when they went at it in earnest.
1913 Western Horseman 10 Jan. 1324/2 The two that got inside the flag only saved their distance by Billy Andrews pulling Baldy almost to a walk at the wire.
1936 Truth (Brisbane) 20 Dec. 2/7 Before they reached the distance Ted Bartle had taken King's Head up to the front.
1994 Irish Times (Nexis) 25 Apr. (Sport Suppl.) 7 The Sheikh Mohammed-owned filly, ridden by Thierry Jarnet, took up the running at the distance and quickened well to score by a length.
(b) A length of 240 yards (219 metres) on a racecourse. Now rare, except as implied or understood in the conventional use of sense 13a(a) to denote a length of 240 yards from the winning post.
ΚΠ
1751 J. Pond Sporting Kalendar p. xxi. 240 Yards is a Distance.
1810 Sporting Mag. 36 241 When about two distances from home..his colt hung upon the former.
1856 Sunday Times 12 Oct. (Sporting & Agric. Suppl.) 1/4 The Dyrham Park Handicap (one mile, four furlongs, and a distance).
1875 ‘Stonehenge’ Man. Brit. Rural Sports (ed. 12) ii. i. xiv. §2. 490 A round, flat course, short of two miles by a distance.
1939 Townsville (Queensland) Daily Bull. 27 June 10/1 He ran second..in the Empire Handicap, one mile and a distance, beaten three lengths at Wanganui on June 5.
2009 N. Clee Eclipse ix. 111 Eclipse was already a distance (240 yards) ahead of the others, and he maintained the gap, coming to the line ‘with uncommon ease’.
(c) A space of more than thirty lengths between two finishers in a race, typically as an official margin of victory. Frequently in by a distance (often used loosely in the sense ‘by a wide margin’, ‘easily’). Cf. length n. 4c, (also) head n.1 1b(b), neck n.1 4, nose n. 1d.In early examples probably a length of 240 yards (see sense 13a(b)); 30 lengths is approx. 80 yards.
ΚΠ
1760 C. Johnstone Chrysal II. i. viii. 68 You must know that I have measured the foot of them all, in this heat, and find that I have the heels by a distance at least.
1806 York Herald 15 Nov. He was never headed, and even betting he won by a distance: Sir Hugh took the lead, was never headed, and beat his antagonist by a distance and a half.
1872 Oriental Sporting Mag. Dec. 372 Lady Vane came in first by a distance, but was found to have dropped a couple of weight cloths half way.
1906 Devon & Exeter Daily Gaz. 17 Apr. 7/4 Heroine was an easy winner by a distance from St. Selskar.
1987 Racing Post 30 Mar. 1/3 He was particularly impressive at Fontwell Park last week when making all to score win by a distance from Good Lord.
2001 Sunday Mercury (Birmingham) (Nexis) 28 Jan. 95 See More Business, who drifted to 9-4 second favourite, stormed home by a distance from Beau.
b. Sport. The full length of a race; the length of course over which a race is run.
ΚΠ
1762 W. Kenrick tr. J.-J. Rousseau Emilius & Sophia I. 259 Without troubling himself about the distance, he always prefers the smoothest ground.
1846 M. A. Richardson Local Historian's Table Bk. Hist. Div. V. xvi. 371 An opinion prevailed in certain quarters that he had not had sufficient training for the distance.
1887 M. Shearman Athletics & Football (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) 104 The runner must accustom himself to run at an even pace, and at as fast an even pace as he can command over the distance.
1985 H. Payne Athletes in Action 35 Harry Wilson represented Kent county at all distances from 100m to marathon.
2004 Racing Post 7 May 76/4 Privy Seal, stepping-up in distance, looked dangerous two furlongs out, but he was found wanting when push came to shove and may require better ground.
c. Boxing. The scheduled length of a bout.Recorded earliest in to go (also last, stay) the distance at Phrases 3a.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > boxing > [noun] > bout or contest > length of contest
distance1897
1897 Sunday Oregonian (Portland) 31 Jan. 2/2 The boys went the went the distance without either gaining any decided advantage, and the referee..declared the bout a draw.
1934 L. Harvey Training & Self Def. 112 If..you can stay the full distance of a contest..work to a schedule during the fight.
1977 Radio Times 26 Mar. 42/4 Dave ‘Boy’ Green..has won all his 23 professional bouts, 18 of them inside the distance.
1986 Times 1 Aug. 30/6 He hurt me once or twice, but I was prepared to go the full distance if necessary.
1987 Boxing News 21 Aug. 9/3 Now opponents were taking him the distance.
2003 Daily Mail 30 June 57/1 The Welshman was knocked down for the first time in his career before bludgeoning Mitchell to become the first man to beat the former WBA world champion inside the distance.
III. Difference or discrimination between things, and related senses.
14.
a. Difference, distinction; spec. difference or discrepancy in treatment. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > relationship > difference > [noun]
diversitya1340
difference1340
variancec1374
distancea1382
unlikenessa1387
variationc1405
discrepation?a1425
distinction1435
severaltyc1449
unlikelinessc1450
dissemblance1463
unlikelihood1483
alteritya1500
indifferencec1503
discrepancea1522
dissimilitude1532
differency1542
variety1552
discernment1570
disparitya1575
discrepancy1579
otherness1587
discernance1592
imparity1608
disanalogy1610
disresemblance1622
dislikeness1623
diff1624
inconformity1625
irresemblance1628
variousness1628
odds1642
disparation1654
aliety1656
disparility1656
disparateness1659
severality1664
nonconformity1672
unconformableness1712
dissimilarity1715
differentness1727
differ1787
allogeneitya1834
otherwiseness1890
otherliness1937
diversion-
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Deut. i. 17 Noon shal be distaunce of persoonys [L. distantia personarum].
1481 W. Caxton tr. Myrrour of Worlde i. xiv. sig. d2v She gyueth to one somme thyng that another hath not in hym, how be it that noman can perceyue ony distaunce.
1481 (a1470) J. Tiptoft tr. Cicero De Amicicia (Caxton) sig. c5 Good men may neuir be frendes with suche as be noughty, But for that, that there is als grete a distaunce, or difference bytwene theyr maners and studyes.
b. The capacity to distinguish between things correctly. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
a1475 tr. Thomas à Kempis De Imitatione Christi (Cambr. Gg.1.16) (1997) iii. lx. 138 Iugement of gode and yvel, and distance of trewe and false.

Phrases

P1. Phrases in which distance is the object of a preposition. See also Phrases 2.
a. at a distance. (formerly also †at distance): in a distant or remote position; a way off; some distance apart. Also figurative (cf. sense 8).
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > distance > distance or farness > a long way off [phrase]
at distancea1425
in the distance?a1439
far to seek?1544
at a distance1697
a1425 (c1333–52) L. Minot Poems (1914) 30 Sir Dauid þe Bruse was at distance, When Edward þe Baliolfe rade with his lance; Þe north end of Ingland teched him to daunce, When he was met on þe more with mekill mischance.
1530 Thorpe's Examinacion sig. G.vi Graunte to vs and to all other, that in the same wyse, and for the same cause specially or for ony other cause be at distaunce, to be knette and made one in true feith.
1549 T. Cooper Lanquet's Epitome of Crons. f. Mmiv The Hunnes, fallyng at distance with the Romaines, spoyled and ouerrunne Thracia and Illiria.
1621 R. Burton Anat. Melancholy iii. ii. ii. iv. 575 All these allurements hitherto are afarre off, and at a distance.
1654 R. Codrington tr. Justinus Hist. 74 To those who at distance do observe it.
1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World ix. 261 At a distance it appears like an Island.
1711 R. Steele Spectator No. 96. ⁋2 My Master..has often been whipp'd for not keeping me at a distance.
1743 E. F. Heywood Present for Servant-Maid 35 You ought therefore to carry yourself at a Distance towards them; I do not mean with a proud or prudish air.
1748 B. Robins & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson i. iii. 29 Having sounded them at a distance, and not finding them so precipitate and vindictive as he expected, he proceeded no further with them.
a1837 E. C. Knight Jrnl. in C. Knight Autobiogr. (1861) I. xiii. 226 It was accompanied by hints that when she had an establishment her ladies should be kept at a distance.
1847 Ld. Tennyson Princess vi. 124 Blanche At distance follow'd.
1976 T. Stoppard Dirty Linen 57 Arthur..shouts loudly into the door through which he enters, as though calling to someone at a distance.
2006 Vanity Fair July 64/1 The officers stood at a distance, presumably consulting on the question of whether this was a demonstration.
b. in (a) distance: in a distant or remote position; a way off. Cf. in the distance at sense 6a. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) i. l. 5604 He lokid aboute [among] the rokkis alle And sauh nothyng beside nor in distaunce.
?1567 M. Parker Whole Psalter xxxvi. 98 Thus depe musing with my selfe in a trance Callyng to mynde the endes of good and bad: Though they tweine here lead a life in distance.
1602 J. Marston Antonios Reuenge iv. i. sig. G2 Kept in distance at the halberts point.
1614 W. S. in T. Overbury et al. Wife now Widdow Newes from Sea sig. G4 A mans companions are (like ships) to be kept in distance, for falling foule one of another.
a1683 J. Owen Medit. & Disc. Glory of Christ (1691) xii. 155 The heart of a believer affected with the Glory of Christ, is like the Needle touched with the Loadstone. It can no longer be quiet, no longer be satisfied in a distance from him.
c. out of distance: out of the way; out of reach.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > distance > distance or farness > a long way off [phrase] > out of range or reach
out of the way1484
out of distancea1500
on the windy side of1600
in the clear1901
a1500 (a1450) Generides (Trin. Cambr.) l. 3056 (MED) Fast they hyed them owt of ther distaunce.
1642 T. Fuller Holy State ii. xvii. 114 He never demands out of distance of the price he intends to take.
1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. vi. l. 270 For skill in School-Divinity they beat all other Orders quite out of distance.
a1656 Bp. J. Hall Shaking of Olive-tree (1660) ii. 95 Those that are out of distance what noise so ever they make, are not heard.
1715 Second Let. from Country Whig 4 Our Majority in both Houses of Parliament was out of Distance, and we thought our selves as secure of the Throne as we do now.
1816 J. Austen Emma II. xiv. 264 We are rather out of distance of the very striking beauties. View more context for this quotation
1916 G. Edgar Swift Nick vi. 92 When he had travelled out of distance, she checked the impatient torrent of protest rising to his lips.
d. without distance. Also without any distance, (Scottish) but distance.
(a) Without delay; immediately. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
c1330 Short Metrical Chron. (Auch.) l. 915 in PMLA (1931) 46 128/2 Anon wiþ outen ani destaunce, He told þe king of his meschaunce.
c1425 (c1400) Laud Troy-bk. l. 5733 (MED) Ector..wente hom to his fadur, And bad he scholde with-oute distaunce Come with alle his puruyaunce.
c1500 Sir Corneus in M. M. Furrow Ten 15th-cent. Comic Poems (1985) 285 After mete, without distans, The cokwoldes schuld togeþer danse.
1509 Kynge Rycharde Cuer du Lyon (de Worde) sig. F.iiv In marche moneth the kynge of fraunce Wente to shyppe without dystaunce.
1543 Chron. J. Hardyng f. C.xlv Within fewe yeres, in peace and rest to liuen He crowned his sonne without distaunce Kyng of Englande.
1662 A. Petrie Compend. Hist. Catholick Church i. 455 He answered calmly, It shall be so, but first the Pope's Process must be published; and afterwards, without any distance, he caused the Appeal of the Templaries, with the causes thereof, to be read and published.
(b) Indisputably, certainly, assuredly. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > absence of doubt, confidence > assured fact, certainty > making certain, assurance > of course, certainly [phrase]
to iwissea1000
mid iwissea1000
in wisc1000
to wis(se)c1000
without(en (any) weenc1175
sans fail1297
thereof no strife1297
but werea1300
forouten werea1300
out of werea1300
without werea1300
without deceit1303
for certainc1320
it is to wittingc1320
withouten carec1320
without nayc1330
without noc1330
without (but out of) dread1340
no doubtc1380
without distancec1390
no fresea1400
out of doubta1400
without doubta1400
for, (in, at obs.), of, to (a) certaintyc1400
withouten stance14..
hazel woods shakea1413
of, on, in warrantisec1440
sure enough?1440
without question?1440
wythout diswerec1440
without any dispayrec1470
for (also of) a surety?a1475
in (also for) surenessa1475
of certainc1485
without any (also all) naya1500
out of question?1526
past question?1526
for sure1534
what else1540
beyond (also out of, past, without) (all) peradventure1542
to be a bidden by1549
out of (also without) all cry1565
with a witness1579
upon my word1591
no question1594
out of all suspicion1600
for a certain1608
without scruple1612
to be sure1615
that's pos1710
in course1722
beyond (all) question1817
(and) no mistake1818
no two ways about it (also that)1818
of course1823
bien entendu1844
yessiree1846
you bet you1857
make no mistake1876
acourse1883
sans doute1890
how are you?1918
you bet your bippy1968
c1390 (c1350) Proprium Sanctorum in Archiv f. das Studium der Neueren Sprachen (1888) 81 107 Þer is ȝiuen Auttorite vnbynde and Bynde..of heore synnes wiþ-oute distaunce.
1499 Contempl. Synners (de Worde) sig. Miii As gracyous god..Hath ordeynt the heuen but dystaunce to endure.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. iii. 28 Sex hundreth yeris and od Haue I, without distance, In erth..Liffyd.
P2. In adverbial phrases in which distance is modified by a verbal noun. Usually following a preposition, esp. within (also in, to, etc.).
a. Near enough to reach by the means specified, or within the range of the specified action, as in within commuting distance, within driving distance, within walking distance, etc.
ΚΠ
1634 J. Russell Two Famous Pitcht Battels Lypsich & Lutzen 62 Having within a reaching distance got, They did salute them with their thundring shot.
1751 B. Franklin Exper. & Observ. Electr. 62 Electrified clouds passing over hills or high buildings..may be attracted lower till within their striking distance.
1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps i. x. 66 The width of the fissure seemed to be fairly within jumping distance.
1865 T. Carlyle Hist. Friedrich II of Prussia V. xviii. xiii. 332 Steps forward still more briskly, to firing distance; begins his platoon thunder, with the due steady fury.
1919 Vanity Fair Jan. 36/1 Something nice and easy, within commuting distance of New York.
1930 O. Asche Saga of Hans Hansen xvii. 194 I call out aloud and fire a shot from my automatic in case there shall be any trappers in hearing distance.
2009 Vanity Fair Aug. 76/1 [He] lives in a small apartment within walking distance of the office.
b. Used to indicate close proximity to a person or place (often hyperbolical), or in figurative contexts with reference to achieving a goal, reaching a target, overtaking an opponent, etc., as in within spitting distance, within striking distance, within touching distance.
ΚΠ
1835 N.-Y. Spectator 23 Feb. They did not approach within hailing distance of the real question—the Constitutional question.
1939 Times 29 May 3/3 The runs that put Nottinghamshire within striking distance of Surrey's total.
1953 R. Ellison Let. 24 July in R. Ellison & A. Murray Trading Twelves (2000) 51 Today Mose is living within spitting distance of the capital and the white folks are accepting our presence with a certain amount of grace.
1995 New Scientist 22 July 16/2 The JILA team got within spitting distance of this Bose-Einstein condensation earlier this year.
2012 P. Larkin Albert, Dougie & Wim (e-book, accessed 22 Sept. 2021) 394 Hibs were continuing a decent run of form which saw them still within touching distance of a Rangers side starting to look its age.
2017 R. S. Meyers Widow of Wall Street (e-book ed.) vii Their apartment was spitting distance from her parent's home.
P3. Phrases in which distance is the object of particular verbs.
a. to go (also last, stay) the distance.
(a) Originally and chiefly Horse Racing. To be able to hold out or keep going for the full length or duration of a race, fight, etc.
ΚΠ
1829 Times 4 May 6/3 Mr. Stenewer has nothing in his stable that can go the distance.
1887 M. Shearman Athletics & Football (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) 112 The good steeplechaser must, of course, be a long-distance runner, as no one without staying powers can hope to last the distance.
1890 Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago) 28 June 2/4 I did not back the horse for a dollar. I did not think he could go the distance.
1936 Daily Tel. 5 Feb. 20/2 Burstow (S.) Handicap 'Chase (3m.).—Kiang will have no trouble in staying the distance.
2014 Times 10 Oct. 64/3 Martin is not in doubt about Quick Jack's ability to stay the distance, nor his effectiveness on testing going.
(b) Boxing.
(i) Of a boxer: to complete the full scheduled length of a fight without being knocked out.
ΚΠ
1897 Sunday Oregonian (Portland) 31 Jan. 2/2 The boys went the distance without either gaining any decided advantage, and the referee..declared the bout a draw.
1936 Times 24 Nov. 6/6 A fearless fighter who had..‘gone the distance’ three times with the famous negro, Al Brown.
1988 Boxing Nov. 23/1 Levai ran around the ring for three rounds, becoming the first Olympic boxer to go the distance against Teofilo Stevenson.
2003 T. Butler Field House Echoes 110 Tudor went the distance against Crocker in both 1939 and '40, one of only seven boxers to do so in three years.
(ii) Of a boxing match: to last the scheduled length (as opposed to being decided by knockout, disqualification, etc.).
ΚΠ
1913 Aberdeen Daily Jrnl. 15 Feb. (2nd ed.) 3/7 The bout, which was characterised by hard hitting and good boxing, went all the distance.
1918 Pall Mall Gaz. 29 June 81 So well matched were the men that the bouts lasted the distance in most cases.
1958 Times 30 Sept. 15/1 This greater experience could be particularly valuable if the bout goes the distance.
2018 G. Pantalone From Boxing Ring to Battlefield iii. 21 The bout went the distance.
(c) In extended use.
(i) To make the necessary commitment or show the tenacity to achieve a goal, fulfil an undertaking, etc.
ΚΠ
1911 Union Postal Clerk (U.S.) Feb. 7/1 I would like to stay the distance for to quit is called a sin.
1919 R. Bedford Aladdin & Boss Cockie (1920) ii. 18 Anyhow, good luck to her to find before marriage instead of after that she couldn't last the distance.
1988 J. McInerney Story of my Life ii. 21 Most guys can't really go the distance. But still he's cute.
2003 Daily Mirror 29 Jan. 5/4 Every year nearly seven million of us make the same resolution again, having failed to stay the distance last time.
(ii) Of a machine, tool, or other object: to last, or serve its purpose, for a long time; to be durable.
ΚΠ
1936 San Francisco Chron. 13 Jan. 4/2 (advt.) Goods are never cheap if they don't go the distance.
1963 Ordnance 48 241 (advt.) Goes the distance with less time out.
1991 Sassy Aug. 4 Marathon Mascara really goes the distance.
2012 Earthmovers Apr. 36 (advt.) Choose Furukawa's quality for a rock-breaker that stays the distance!
(d) Baseball. To pitch for the entire length of a game without being relieved (relieve v. 7a).
ΚΠ
1911 Washington Times 14 Apr. (Last ed.) 16/4 The fans kept off Bobby Groom, and he went the distance without any trouble.
1967 Boston Sunday Herald 14 May ii. 5/1 Pitcher Ed McGrath went the distance and battery mate, Tony Carderelli, drove in four runs in the Boston State victory.
1996 Japan Times 29 Apr. 17/6 Yokohama starter Takashi Saito (3–0) scattered three hits and struck out 15 in going the distance.
b. to keep one's distance: to maintain a safe or proper distance from someone or something; spec. (in early use) to avoid or reject a familiarity inappropriate to one's social status; (later) to be reserved, reticent, or uncommunicative. Formerly also occasionally to wait one's distance.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > discourtesy > be discourteous [verb (intransitive)] > not be affable
to make oneself strange1390
to make (it) strangec1405
to make (it) strange1598
to wait one's distance1600
to wait one's distance1642
starch1698
prim1721
to cast snowballs1725
to put on the stranger1809
to show the cold shoulder1816
stiffen1864
to play hard to get1929
1600 B. Jonson Every Man out of his Humor v. iii. sig. Qivv If you be out, keepe your distance, and be not made a Shot-clog no more.
a1640 P. Massinger Parl. of Love (1976) ii. iii. 62 Pray you keepe your distance, And grow not rude.
1642 T. Fuller Holy State iv. xvi. 325 Teaching words their distance to wait on his matter.
1733 J. Swift Thoughts on Var. Subj. in J. Swift et al. Misc. I. 307 If a Man makes me keep my Distance, the Comfort is, he keeps his at the same Time.
1773 O. Goldsmith She stoops to Conquer ii. 38 It won't do, so I beg you'll keep your distance.
1831 Society 1 12 Her mother..treated him with bare civility, to make him, as she expressed it, keep his distance.
1925 E. A. Powell Beyond Utmost Purple Rim xvi. 418 It was..only the methodic shouting..of the boatmen which caused them to keep their distance.
1990 N. Gordimer My Son's Story 30 He kept his distance from me because he thought he must smell of her arm and shoulder pressed against his.
2010 Daily Tel. 15 June 7/5 (caption) A diver keeps her distance from a venomous Lion's Mane jellyfish, hundreds of which have been seen off the Cornish coast.
2014 T. McCulloch Stillman 50 I make sure I keep a careful distance from Stan, wouldn't put it past him to grass me up.
c. to know one's distance: to recognize what distance one ought to keep from someone or something; esp. to show proper respect towards one's social superiors.Not in common use after 19th cent.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > respect > respect or show respect [verb (intransitive)]
to make feasta1325
vail1509
vail1609
to know one's distancea1616
Schweik1973
a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) v. iii. 215 She knew her distance, and did angle for mee, Madding my eagernesse with her restraint. View more context for this quotation
1660 T. M. Walker's Hist. Independency IV. 65 They intended to curb the Wallingford party, by teaching them manners, and to know their distance.
?1719 T. Beringto News from Dead 37 I..have learnt something of decorum, and know my distance when I address to Persons of Quality yet in the World.
1857 J. Bentley Wealth (ed. 3) 85 A sympathy of feelings and tastes, which makes the common labourer, so long as he knows his distance, a welcome companion for an hour.
1862 J. G. Vassar Around World (ed. 2) 266 He attempts to strike, but the charmers know their distance.
1984 L. Spencer Twice Loved (2013) 171 ‘Don't touch!’ Rye called. ‘They sting!’ The dog knew and kept her distance.
P4. Noun phrases with of.
a.
distance of the bastion n. Fortification Obsolete the length of each of the exterior sides of a polygonal fort.
ΚΠ
1672 J. Lacey tr. A. Tacquet Mil. Archit. ii. 3 in T. Venn Mil. & Maritine Discipline ii The side of the outward Polygon, or the distance of the Bastions.
1853 J. H. Stocqueler Mil. Encycl. 85/2 Distance of the bastion is a term applied to the exterior polygon.
b.
distance of divisions n. Military Obsolete a measure of how long the front of a division or army is (see quot. 1853).
ΚΠ
1788 D. Dundas Princ. Mil. Movements 188 The rear ranks can be sufficiently loosened and march with great convenience, and without increasing the distances of divisions.
1853 J. H. Stocqueler Mil. Encycl. 85/2 The distance of divisions is the number of paces, of thirty inches each, comprised in the front of any division or body, and is nearly three-fourths of the number of files; being once ascertained in each division, the officer commanding it can at all times recollect the number of paces that are equal to his front.
P5. Proverb. distance lends enchantment to the view: things look better when seen from a distance. Also simply distance lends enchantment.
ΚΠ
1799 T. Campbell Pleasures of Hope & Other Poems i. 7 'Tis distance lends enchantment to the view.
1827 T. Hood Whims & Oddities 2nd Ser. 20 In spite of what the Bard has penn'd, I fear the distance did not ‘lend Enchantment to the view’.
1936 M. R. Anand Coolie (1993) iv. 169 But distance lent enchantment to this view. For the ascent to the plateau disclosed on the left a sewerage farm.
1998 H. Collins & T. Pinch Golem at Large (2014) 3 In science and technology, as in love, ‘distance lends enchantment.’

Compounds

C1.
a. As a modifier, designating lenses used to correct myopia, or spectacles with such lenses, as in distance glasses, distance lens, distance spectacles, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > ophthalmology or optometry > aids to defective vision > [noun] > spectacles > other types of spectacles
half-moon glasses1607
half-moon spectacles1607
blinkers1732
temple-spectacles1762
reading glass1853
distance glasses1864
horn spectacles1893
bifocal1899
trifocal1899
horn-rims1927
harlequin spectacles1940
harlequin glasses1945
library frame1948
aviator1951
library glasses1959
library spectacles1962
multifocals1962
wire-rim1968
the world > health and disease > healing > ophthalmology or optometry > aids to defective vision > [noun] > spectacles > lens of spectacles > types of
pebble1688
distance lens1907
omnifocal1962
toric1962
varifocal1975
1864 Med. Times & Gaz. 12 Nov. 510/1 The patient's near-point with his distance-glasses on is..20 inches.
1867 Aunt Judy's Christmas Volume 333 She had come out with her ‘distance’ spectacles on.
1907 Washington Times 13 Feb. 9/5 (advt.) Don't be compelled to change your glasses every time you wish to use reading lenses instead of distance lenses, or vice versa.
1989 N.Y. Times 24 May (Business Day section) d1/2 Contact lens marketers believe the baby boom generation will be more resistant..to wearing reading glasses with their distance contacts.
2018 E. George Punishm. she Deserves (2019) 609 Mr. Keegan couldn't quite see as the bloke was at a distance..and he himself wasn't wearing his distance specs.
b. Sport (chiefly Athletics). As a modifier, designating an athlete who competes in races over a long distance, or racing of this kind, as in distance runner, distance running, etc. Chiefly with reference to running events over longer distances than sprints, now esp. long-distance events of 5000 metres or longer. Cf. long distance adj. a, middle distance adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > [noun] > types of race
quarter-mile1611
dead1635
diaulos1706
quarter1779
dead heat1796
match race1804
dash1836
sprint race1836
mile1851
road race1852
time trial1857
decider1858
all-ages1864
rough-up1864
hippodrome1867
distance running1868
team race1869
run-off1873
relay race1878
walk-away1879
title race1905
tortoise race1913
procession1937
stage1943
pace1968
prologue1973
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > [noun] > racer > types of
dead-heater1868
distance runner1868
pacemaker1884
tail-ender1885
pacer1893
distancer1911
finisher1963
1868 Sporting Gaz. 4 Jan. 7/3 A great impetus was given to the distance runners of that time.
1869 Baily's Monthly Mag. Apr. 251 The sprint and distance running qualities so rarely combine in the same person.
1904 Daily Mail 10 Sept. 4/6 (headline) Diet for distance swimmers.
1911 Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 854/1 Hard daily training is necessary for a distance runner.
1976 Sci. Amer. June 110/3 For some years the faster sprinters have on the whole been Americans and the faster distance runners Europeans.
1985 Christian Sci. Monitor 26 Aug. 20/2 Slaney..holds every American women's distance running record from 800 meters to 10,000.
2005 Runner's World Oct. 65/1 The Stillman height/weight ratio table is often used by distance runners as an ideal weight guide.
c.
(a) As a modifier, with the sense ‘of, relating to, or carried out at a distance by communications technology’; now typically designating education in which contact between students and teachers is by communication of this kind rather than in a classroom, lecture theatre, etc., or designating a student or teacher engaged in this type of education, as in distance course, distance education, distance learner, distance teacher, etc.
ΚΠ
1894 H. Drummond Lowell Lect. Ascent of Man v. 233 This new distance-language began again at the beginning, just as all Language does, by employing signs.
1925 Telephone Bull. (Southern New Eng. Telephone Co.) Dec. 5/2 The people of the state will this year spend something like $4,000,000 on toll messages, which of course includes all forms of a distance message.
1970 Continuous Learning Mar. 59 These ‘Gateway Courses’..were planned in collaboration with The National Extension College, a multi-media college based in Cambridge, which has had extensive experience in ‘distance teaching’ in a variety of fields.
1981 R. G. Myers Connecting Worlds 68 The mammoth evaluation of distance education using a television satellite (SITE) included a study by the Operations Research Group in Baroda.
1987 S. Afr. Panorama Nov. 12 The training of teachers and distance educators who must provide quality education on all levels.
1995 Computing 11 May 44/2 Many of its students are distance learners and may be studying in Canada or Singapore.
1996 Sunday Times (Nexis) 11 Feb. Solo and distance workers suffer high levels of stress and isolation away from the social office environment.
2020 Brandon (Manitoba) Sun 5 Dec. Terri has gained a lot of valuable experience that has allowed her to..deliver distance courses in our comprehensive health care aide program.
(b)
distance learning n. education in which contact between students and teachers is via communications technology rather than face to face in a classroom, lecture theatre, etc.; frequently as a modifier.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > teaching > [noun] > other methods of teaching
demonstration1742
bear-leading1766
royal road1793
tachydidaxy1846
object teaching1851
object system1862
methodic1864
community education1873
methodics1883
maieutics1885
type-system1901
direct method1904
spoon-feeding1905
play method1914
playway1914
project method1916
active learning1919
study skills1924
skit1926
free activity1929
hypnopaedia1932
sleep-teaching1932
chalk and talk1937
show-and-tell1941
demo1945
naming of (the) parts1946
team teaching1949
teleteaching1953
programming1954
audio-lingualism1961
immersion1965
dem1968
open learning1970
suggestopaedia1970
suggestopedy1970
distance learning1972
fast-tracking1972
paideia1982
tutorial1984
m-learning2001
1972 T. Dodds (title) IEC Broadsheet on distance learning no. 1. Multi-media approaches to rural education.
1977 Proc. Royal Soc. Med. 70 684/2 I do not think that the distance learning pattern is suited to school-leavers.
1986 Libr. Assoc. Rec. Jan. 13/3 The Aberystwyth course did not get off the ground because most local authorities were unwilling to release staff for a whole year, and..as a result Aberystwyth was considering offering the MEd degree as a distance-learning course.
2004 Science 30 Jan. 605/1 A distance learning program..would provide Internet access to K-12 schools.
2011 Fortean Times Mar. 13 (advt.) MSc Parapsychology (by Distance Learning). This two-year part-time course is delivered entirely online.
C2. With past participles, forming compounds with the sense ‘with or by distance’, as in distance-challenged, distance-mellowed, distance-softened, etc.
ΚΠ
1825 Aberdeen Censor 12 May 131 And the broken dash of the rocky linn, With its distance-mellowed gentle din.
1850 E. B. Browning Poems (new ed.) II. 196 You can hear that evermore Distance-softened noise.
1900 E. Mitchell Plotters of Paris xi. 188 Not a sound broke the night except the distance-muffled hum of street traffic.
1932 J. L. Mitchell Lost Trumpet xi. 142 We heard the distance-softened clamour of dance-music.
2002 Spectator (Hamilton, Ont.) (Nexis) 16 Dec. c16 Meg and Tom Hanks are star-crossed, distance-challenged lovers-to-be.
C3. Horse Racing. As a modifier (in sense 13a(a)).
distance chair n. now historical a raised chair situated at the distance post in a heat race for the use of the distance judge; cf. distance stand n.In quot. 1911 with reference to the fence on the Grand National course at Aintree subsequently commonly known as The Chair.
ΚΠ
1787 World & Fashionable Advertiser 12 Sept. Pulled up at the distance chair.
1866 Chester Chron. 22 Sept. 8/5 At the distance chair Accident came to the front and won easily by seven lengths.
1911 Penny Illustr. Paper 1 Apr. 430 (caption) The distance chair jump.
1931 Brisbane Courier 17 June 6/4 There were three posts or ‘stoops’, round which the horses had to pass, making a kind of loop, and then to return along the same track to the ‘distance chair’, which was 240 yards short of the winning post.
distance flag n. now historical a flag positioned at the distance post and dropped by the official stationed there when the winning horse reaches the winning post.
ΚΠ
1731 J. Cheny Hist. List Horse-matches 75 Midge had opportunity of passing the said Distance-Flag, before it was fallen.
1870 Blaine's Encycl. Rural Sports (rev. ed.) iii. iv. 372 So that the man in the distance-stand may clearly see the winning-post, and be ready to drop the distance-flag.
2011 K. Hollingsworth Kentucky Thoroughbred 25 In mile heats, the distance flag was located forty yards short of the finish line.
distance judge n. now historical a judge stationed at the distance post who drops the flag when the winning horse reaches the winning post.
ΚΠ
1830 Amer. Turf Reg. & Sporting Mag Sept. 14 There shall be two distance Judges, and three patrol Judges, who repair to the Judges' stand, after each heat.
2013 Times 6 Apr. 83/5 The name refers to the actual chair originally incorporated into the superstructure of the fence at which the distance judge sat.
distance post n. now chiefly historical a post indicating the distance from the winning post which a horse running in a heat race must have reached when the winner finishes in order to qualify for a subsequent heat.
ΚΠ
1731 London Evening-post 17–19 June A Mare got the first Heat very easily; but after she was within the Distance-Post went on the wrong Side of a Post that was between the Distance-Post and the Starting-Post.
1809 Brit. Press 6 Apr. in Spirit of Public Jrnls. (1810) XIII. 63 Gibby and Premier..were scarcely able to strike a trot in passing the distance-post.
1870 Blaine's Encycl. Rural Sports (rev. ed.) iii. iv. 371 In coming in on the right of the course, there should be two distance-posts; the first is to be erected two hundred and forty yards from the winning-post; the second a hundred and twenty from it.
1953 Yorks. Evening Post 18 July 8/1 (caption) The dog slipped under the rails as the field passed the distance post.
1979 M. W. Jones Derby ii. 53 The eventual winner Sam glimpsed the leader for the first time only as he reached the distance post.
distance stand n. a small stand situated at the distance post in a heat race for the use of the distance judge; cf. distance chair n.
ΚΠ
1827 Louisiana Advertiser 20 Nov. Superior pulled up at the distance stand the first heat.
1870 Blaine's Encycl. Rural Sports (rev. ed.) iii. iv. 372 So that the man in the distance-stand may clearly see the winning-post, and be ready to drop the distance-flag.
1910 S. L. Boardman Handbk. of Turf 74 A horse which fails to reach the distance-post or stand before the heat has been won..is regarded as distanced.
C4.
distance block n. (in engineering, building, etc.) a block inserted between two objects to keep them a required distance apart; cf. distance piece n.
ΚΠ
1844 W. Pole Treat. Cornish Pumping Engine I. ii. 82 Two plates.., which are bolted together with distance blocks between to keep them parallel with each other.
1979 I. H. Seeley Building Quantities Explained (ed. 3) iv. 42 Bends, hooks, tying wire, distance blocks and ordinary spacers are deemed to be included.
2000 Traffic Engin. & Control Apr. 167/3 Kistler force plates can be placed between the distance block and the deformable structure.
distance marker n. something used to indicate the distance between two things; (sometimes) spec. a mark on floors, walls, etc., to facilitate correct social distancing.
ΚΠ
1853 tr. M. Lermontov Sketches Russ. Life in Caucasus i. 51 A girl and boy run forward from the rest, like distance-markers from a battalion on drill.
1943 Valley Morning Star (Harlingen, Texas) 7 Sept. (Final ed.) ii. 11/1 Probably one of the most confusing things to American tourists traveling in Mexico will be the road signs. All distance markers are marked off in kilometers.
2016 New Scientist 1 Oct. 39/2 One particular class, type 1a supernovae, burn with predictable brightness, meaning we can use them as cosmic distance markers.
2021 Hindustan Times (Nexis) 11 Aug. Common areas in the school premises will have a distance marker or floor markings to ensure social distancing is maintained among students and staff at all times.
distance piece n. (in engineering, building, etc.) a block inserted between two objects to keep them a required distance apart; cf. distance block n.
ΚΠ
1836 H. van Wart & S. A. Goddard Brit. Patent 7191 (1855) 8 This rod..is..connected to the lower end of a sweep lever..formed by two parallel plates joined together by pins, with distance pieces at top and bottom.
1840 Papers on Duties Corps Royal Engineers IV. 224 A section across a main rib, showing the diagonal braces, and also a distance piece or additional brace.
1930 Engineering 4 July 9/3 The introduction of a distance piece between a piston and its crosshead.
2006 H. P. Bloch Pract. Guide Compressor Technol. (ed. 2) ii. 56 Distance pieces are usually furnished as steel or cast iron castings or steel weldments.
distance receptor n. Physiology a sensory receptor or organ that responds to stimuli (typically visual, auditory, or olfactory) originating at a distance from an organism.
ΚΠ
1904 C. S. Sherrington in Boston Med. & Surg. Jrnl. 5 May 494/2 Distance receptors..drive the total animal; they initiate and guide precurrent reactions as contrasted with consummatory.
1927 J. B. S. Haldane & J. S. Huxley Animal Biol. xii. 300 Since they [sc. gastropods] are free-moving, distance-receptors are wanted.
2007 Jrnl. Neurol. Sci. 253 3/1 The reactions to distance receptors often involve the musculature of the animal as a whole.
distance signal n. Railways (now chiefly South Asian) a signal preceding the home signal (home signal n.) giving warning of the latter's setting; = distant signal n. at distant adj. and n. Compounds 2.
ΚΠ
1848 Morning Chron. 12 Sept. 2/4 (headline) New distance signal on the South-Western Railway.
1909 Pall Mall Mag. 43 588/1 We pulled into Barford thirty seconds ahead of time, or rather we pulled up at the distance signal that stood at ‘danger’.
1989 B. P. Saha Police in Free India ii. 40 If a dead body is lying on the railway line beyond the distance signal, GRP without verification may ask the district police to initiate action.
distance vision n. the ability to see distant objects; visual acuity for such objects, typically measured at a distance of 6 metres (approx. 20 feet).
ΚΠ
1883 Med. Rec. (N.Y.) 26 May 562/2 She is not particularly concerned about her distance vision, or she would have had glasses for that purpose long ago.
1929 Lancet 2 Feb. 249/1 The standardised test for central acuity of distance vision consists of the familiar Snellen's types, a series of black letters of diminishing sizes arranged on a white background, and placed at a uniform distance of 6 metres from the patient.
2010 Wall St. Jrnl. 15 May r6/5 Some people with presbyopia wear a contact lens in one eye that corrects for distance vision and another on the other eye for closer ranges.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2022; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

distancev.

Brit. /ˈdɪst(ə)ns/, U.S. /ˈdɪst(ə)ns/
Forms: 1500s distaunse, 1600s– distance; also Scottish 1800s–1900s distan.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: distance n.
Etymology: < distance n.Compare Middle French, French distancer (late 14th cent.). The form distan perhaps results from reanalysis of the final sibilant /s/ as a personal ending.
I. To put, set, or keep (someone or something) at a distance, and related senses.
1.
a. transitive. To put or set (someone or something) at a distance from someone or something else; (now) esp. to make or keep (a person) socially or emotionally distant or apart from others. Frequently with from.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > distance > distance or farness > be far from [verb (transitive)] > put at or remove to a distance
farOE
fersec1000
far-casta1340
removec1384
proloynec1425
prolong1440
purloin1461
elong1477
enstrange1483
eloin1535
elongatec1540
distance1578
discoast1583
eloinate1642
outpost1864
distantiate1924
1578 J. Banister Hist. Man i. f. 18v The head is distaunsed from the body so much in man, for the cause of Aspera Arteria.
1629 J. Wadsworth Eng. Spanish Pilgrime iii. 14 Furnished with some 50. beds, distanced onely by a partition of boards.
1658 J. Owen Of Temptation 167 He knowes what it is to enjoy the favour of Christ..; and perhaps hath been sometimes at some losse in this thing, and so knowes also, what it is to be in the dark, distanced from him.
a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) Hants. 1 Not to speak of the friendly Sea conveniently distanced from London.
1730 A. Smith Court Intrigues 242 So much the sadder, by reason I am distanced from your sweet Company.
1845 Visit to Bury St. Edmunds v. 81 If we be so widely distanced, we shall lose the pleasure of your company.
1860 R. W. Emerson Fate in Conduct of Life (London ed.) 23 This insight..distances those who share it, from those who share it not.
1887 E. E. Money Little Dutch Maiden II. v. 81 The dogs separated some two or three, and gradually distancing them from the others, drove them furiously along.
1963 P.M.L.A. 78 296/1 Primarily Chaucer's narrative method serves to distance us from the characters.
1967 N. Podhoretz Making It I. i. 25 Sons who grew up into literary success are transformed almost beyond recognition and distanced almost beyond a mother's reach.
1998 T. Booth & M. Ainscow From Them to Us v. 66 The modifications made in the curriculum of both these students has the effect of distancing them from their peers.
b. transitive (reflexive). To keep one's distance from (someone or something); spec. to indicate that one is not connected with or a supporter of (a person, idea, practice, etc.). Usually with from. Cf. sense 5.
ΚΠ
1803 tr. J. A. von Retzow in Crit. Rev. 39 App. 549 The king..must have distanced himself too much from Saxony and the banks of the Elbe.
1880 Kensington Mar. 237 We lost no time in distancing ourselves from our bête noire.
1962 Sunday Tel. 2 Sept. 4/6 Above all, he wanted to distance himself from what he called ‘rich man's socialism’.
1984 Guardian 8 Oct. 17 (heading) The White House approach of distancing itself from all the sleaze does work.
2014 Daily Tel. 7 Nov. (Business section) 4/2 Mr Soriot..seems keen to distance himself from the speculation that he is in the frame for the top job.
2. intransitive. To put oneself at a distance from something or someone; to move to a distant or remote place or position; (later also) to stay socially or emotionally distant or apart from someone; to keep one's distance. Frequently with from. Cf. socially distance v. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > distance > distance or farness > be or remain at a distance [verb (intransitive)]
to stand apart1538
to stand off1600
to hold off1604
to keep awaya1616
to keep offa1616
distance1658
to keep one's luff1682
to keep back1836
1658 J. Webb tr. G. de Costes de La Calprenède Hymen's Præludia: 8th Pt. viii. i. 7 Unable to hinder their distancing..a great way from the place of combate.
1863 N.Y. Herald 10 July At five P.M. she distanced from us about five or six miles, when she gave up the chase and hauled to the southward.
1977 C. M. Hall in J. P. Lorio & L. McClenathan Georgetown Family Symposia II. 142 The daughter had been distancing from her mother by her helping and taking-care-of posture, and when she was able to relate to her on a more personal level her mother was correspondingly able to function more effectively.
1986 J. Wheatcroft Slow Exposures 130 As he distanced from the sports car, he was able to see that the Buick had smashed the right front fender.
2009 M. Grigsby College Life through Eyes of Students App. 203 Over time, he distanced from her, saying that they did not ‘get along well’, and eventually he said that he rarely sees her.
3. transitive. To make (a place, object, etc.) appear distant, remote, or unfamiliar.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > thing seen > optical illusion > [verb (transitive)] > make appear distant
distance1695
1695 J. Dryden tr. R. de Piles in tr. C. A. Du Fresnoy De Arte Graphica 170 That which gives the Relievo to a Bowl..is the quick Light, or the white, which appears to be on the side..nearest to us, and the black by consequence distances the Object.
1864 J. R. Lowell Fireside Trav. 198 Mountains, which the ripe Italian air distances with a bloom like that on unplucked grapes.
2014 D. A. Morrison True Yankees i. 14 He had already begun to describe it as exotic, a mixture of the strange and curious that distanced the place and objectified its inhabitants.
4. transitive. To position (two or more items) at a regular distance from one another; to space. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement of length > measure (off) a length or distance [verb (transitive)] > measure distance of
distantiate1610
distance1706
1706 London Gaz. No. 4292/3 All Persons paying to any Lamps, distanced by two of Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace, are exempted from hanging out a Lanthorn and Candle.
1715 N. Dubois & G. Leoni tr. A. Palladio Architecture I. xvii. 30 This manner of distancing the Columns is..call'd Systylos.
5. transitive. To keep (a person or thing) at a distance, esp. so as to avoid close personal or social contact. Cf. sense 1b. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1713 L. Theobald tr. Plato Dialogue of Immortality of Soul 13 We can only make poor Approaches to Wisdom, as we can distance the Operations of the Body, and have no Communication with its Organs.
1786 F. Burney Diary 28 Nov. (1842) III. 232 I wished them well..but I distanced them to the best of my power.
1840 R. Martineau Feats on Fiord (1846) ii. 45 Glad would they have been of any contrivance by which they might as certainly distance Nipen.
II. To cover the distance to (a place or object), and related senses.
6. transitive. Probably: to extend for the whole distance to (an object). Obsolete.Apparently an isolated use.
ΚΠ
1642 H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. I4 The sunne and all the starres that do appear She feels them in herself, can distance all.
7. transitive. To measure or indicate the distance to (a place). Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1650 T. Fuller Pisgah-sight of Palestine i. xiii. 40 The Hebrews distanced their places by severall measures.
III. To leave behind, outstrip, defeat, and related senses.
8.
a. transitive. Horse Racing. To beat (a horse) by a distance (distance n. 13a(a)). Frequently in passive: (of a horse) to be disqualified as a result of being beaten by a distance. Now North American or historical.
ΚΠ
1686 N. Cox Gentleman's Recreation (ed. 3) v. vii. 72 The hindmost Horse being bound to follow him, within a certain distance agreed on..and which ever Horse could distance the other won the Match.
1707 London Gaz. No. 4363/4 Paying a Guinea Entrance (which is to go to the second Horse, distanc'd or not distanc'd).
1713 R. Steele in Guardian 18 Mar. 2/1 He puts in for the Queen's Plate every Year, with Orders to his Rider never to win or be distanced.
1803 M. Cutler Let. 12 Nov. in W. P. Cutler & J. P. Cutler Life, Jrnls. & Corr. M. Cutler (1888) II. 143 If any horses in the race do not arrive at this stage before the foremost arrives at the stage from which they started, they are said to be distanced, and are taken out, and not suffered to run again in the same race.
1895 Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago) 15 Sept. 10/2 In the third heat of the fourth race Nat Goodwin..fell from exhaustion at the half-mile and was distanced.
1964 N.Y. Times 15 Feb. 19/4 The qualifying results:..Abbie's Intruder (Darish), distanced.
2007 P. Edwards Horse & Man in Early Mod. Eng. v. 103 Horses distanced in a race took no further part in the proceedings.
b. transitive. To leave behind or outpace (the other members of a party or group, or other people who are heading in the same direction); esp. to pull away from (the other competitors in a race). Also in extended use: to exceed or outstrip (one's rivals, contemporaries, etc.). Cf. outdistance v.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away from [verb (transitive)] > leave behind by superior speed
outrunc1460
to show (a person) a (clean or fair) pair of heels (also one's heels)1595
to have (also get) the heels of1649
to throw out1682
distance1691
to throw off1695
lose1709
to gain ground of1719
to gain from1805
the world > movement > rate of motion > move at specific rate [verb (transitive)] > gain (ground) upon > catch up or overtake > outstrip
to leave behinda1393
overgoc1425
preventa1500
outgo1530
out-trot1555
outstrip1567
stripa1592
outpacea1596
out-swift1606
to have (also get) the speed ofa1616
outstretcha1642
to give (a person or thing) the go-by1642
to gain bounds of1653
outrace1657
outspeed1661
to cast behind1681
distance1691
belag1721
repass1728
outfoot1740
outdistance1789
fore-reach1803
to have the foot of1832
to run away1843
slip1856
short-head1863
tine1871
forespeed1872
outrate1873
1691 J. Norris Pract. Disc. Divine Subj. 37 We are utterly Distanc'd in the Race.
1712 W. Rogers Cruising Voy. 127 He distanc'd and tir'd both the Dog and the Men.
1789 H. L. Piozzi Feb. in Thraliana (1942) II. 730 I do think Helen Maria Williams has distanced all her Competitors in Lines upon the Slave Trade.
1811 Ld. Byron Let. 16 June in L. A. Marchand Byron's Lett. & Jrnls. (1976) IV. 52 I distanced three swimmers.
1851 H. W. Longfellow Golden Legend v. 238 Our fleeter steeds have distanced our attendants.
1856 C. J. Lever Martins of Cro' Martin vii. 55 [He] had distanced all his competitors in his College career.
1930 R. Clapham in C. Frederick et al. Foxhunting xxviii. 275 Should hounds distance their field and run a fox to ground, the music of a few staunch markers lets the huntsman know in which direction to go.
1987 Cycling Weekly 17 Sept. 18/4 Britain's Paul Curran sees his bid for the amateur title fall as Poland's Andrsej Mierzejewski distances him on a climb.
1996 Sunday Times 7 July 19/8 Distanced by the leaders half-way up the Col de la Madeleine, he chased bravely and made up a three-minute deficit.
9. transitive. To leave (a place) behind; to go away from. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away from [verb (transitive)] > leave behind (something stationary)
disadvance1596
distance1819
shake1872
1819 A. O'Keeffe Dudley I. xx. 285 In proportion as I distanced the place of temptation, the object of it became fainter.
1873 Mrs. Charles in Sunday Mag. Feb. 332 We heard the joyous voices sound louder and freer as they distanced the solemn precincts.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2022; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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