
as far as
IDIOM
▼ ادامه توضیحات دیکشنری؛ پس از بنر تبلیغاتی ▼
English Dictionaryas far asconj.To the degree or extent that:
They returned at nine, as far as we know.Usage Note: As far as the Usage Panel is concerned, as far as had better be followed by both a subject and a form of go or be concerned. As far as is sometimes used as a preposition meaning as for or regarding, especially in speech, but a large majority of the Panel frowns upon this usage. Eighty percent find the as far as construction in this sentence unacceptable:
As far as something to do on the weekend, we didn't even have miniature golf. Eighty-four percent reject the sentence
The Yankees are still very much alive, as far as the divisional race. Further, 89 percent object to as far as when followed by a noun clause, as in
As far as how Koresh got shot, we don't know yet. Our Living Language Despite the admonitions detailed in the Usage Note, recent research indicates that speakers of English in the United States and elsewhere are increasingly dropping the verbal part of the as far as construction, as in
As far as a better house, I don't want one (instead of As far as a better house is concerned...). This trend is more noticeable in speech than in writing. We can infer that this syntactic change is ongoing because teenagers and young adults omit is/are concerned and go/went in these constructions more often than older speakers do.·Like other examples of language variation and change, a number of constraints that we follow regularly, although unconsciously, govern the dropping of the verb in as far as constructions. For instance, if as far as precedes a personal pronoun or one whose point of view is being represented (as far as he is concerned), the verb cannot be deleted (notice that as far as he is strikingly ungrammatical). The longer and more complex the noun or sentence that follows as far as, the more likely the verb is to be omitted. Thus, As far as getting a better house to live in, we... is more likely to be uttered than As far as a house, we.... The very similar phrase so far as is found within verbless constructions in complex sentences that use gerunds as early as the 19th century, as in Jane Austen's novel Emma: so far as our living with Mr. Churchill at Enscombe, it is settled. These omissions in longer constructions seem to have initiated the change leading to their omission in short locutions. Only in the 20th century do we find first noun phrases and then simple nouns without a form of go or be concerned. [TahlilGaran] American Dictionary ▲
Idiomsas far asto the degree that.
As far as I know, he isn't coming to the party.
The city once went so far as to threaten to shut off the building's water supply.Related vocabulary:
as far as possible,
as far as something goesEtymology: based on the literal meaning of as far as (= the same distance as) [TahlilGaran] English Idioms Dictionary ▲
as far asto the extent or degree of something
As far as I know the movie will start in a few minutes.
[TahlilGaran] English Idioms Dictionary ▲
as far as adv. phr. 1. To the degree or amount that; according to what, how much, or how far.
John did a good job as far as he went, but he did not finish it.
So far as the weather is concerned, I do not think it matters.
As far as he was concerned, things were going well. 2. To the extent that; within the limit that.
He has no brothers so far as I know. Compare: FOR ALL
2.
[TahlilGaran] English Idioms Dictionary ▲