afield
IPA: ʌfˈiɫd
adverb
- Away (from the home or starting point, physical or conceptual); usually preceded by far (or farther, further).
- On the field.
- Out in the open.
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Examples of "afield" in Sentences
- Pretty far afield from the topic. joe from Lowell says:
- As the old saying goes, the worst day afield is better than the best day at work.
- I don't know about the rest of you but the cost of going afield is as much to blame as anything.
- Law schools do tolerate some non-PC thinking, but not anything to far afield from the orthodoxy.
- Andy McGill: Law schools do tolerate some non-PC thinking, but not anything to far afield from the orthodoxy.
- And again, that is afield from the narrow point you were making, that Democrats are not sympathetic to al-Qaeda.
- This is getting far afield from the subject of this thread, but the point is that cost-benefit considerations are not immoral.
- You can wind up wasting a lot of your time addressing their nonsensical points which spread farther and farther afield from the discussion.
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