考研英语大纲常考词组短语 remote from
释义:
remote from 远离;与……无关
例句:
They sense that Mr Blair, never close to his party, is becoming dangerously remote from it.
Earlier ethnic violence in Karachi, though disturbing, was at least remote from the heartland.
Most of the country's 4m people live in island and mountain communities remote from the politicians of Port Moresby.
MPs, there is a feeling that the protracted leadership contest is remote from anything that at the moment seems important.
The deep south is remote from Bangkok, and the problems appear intractable.
As time went on, Mr Gygax became more remote from his creation.
The most ideal locations are typically remote from areas where demands are highest, requiring large investments for power transmission lines and land right-of-way use.
To do this in your official capacity in your own name and get away with it is incomprehensibly remote from the realm of reason.
He seems incomprehensibly patriotic, and so very remote from us, when he dies regretting he had only one life to give for his country.
The MFO is a small international command, remote from the Egyptian-Israeli border, manning small monitoring outposts distant from any civilian population centers and lightly armed.
The rise of this brand of politics is often said to reflect a failure by politicians, who are either hopelessly remote from voters' concerns or powerless to address them.
Ally felt remote from anyone who talked like this.
These days the favourite scheme to increase citizens' role is the term limit, which removes politicians from office before they become too professional (and hence remote from the concerns of ordinary citizens).
In Europe no such partisan democratic body exists (the European Parliament is more remote from voters and less powerful than Congress, and MEPs live in a warm bath of mushy conventional wisdom).
Politically, a Europeanization of the banking sector would also require countries to give up sovereignty, but in the area of banking regulation and supervision, which is rather technocratic and more remote from day-to-day concerns of ordinary citizens.
That sort of advocacy, even though uttered with the hope that it may ultimately lead to violent revolution, is too remote from concrete action to be regarded as the kind of indoctrination preparatory to action which was condemned in Dennis.