remotely

UK:**UK and possibly other pronunciationsUK and possibly other pronunciations/rɪˈməʊtli/US:USA pronunciation: IPAUSA pronunciation: IPA/rɪˈmoʊtli/


WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
re•mote•ly /rɪˈmoʊtli/USA pronunciation   adv. 
    1. in a remote manner:She stared remotely into space.
    2. slightly;
      faintly:He's not even remotely interested in your excuses.

WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
re•mote /rɪˈmoʊt/USA pronunciation   adj., -mot•er, -mot•est, n. 
adj. 
  1. far away;
    far distant in space:a remote galaxy.
  2. not near well-populated areas;
    secluded:arriving at the remote village after weeks of walking and canoeing.
  3. distant in time, relationship, connection, etc.:in remote antiquity; a remote ancestor.
  4. not direct or primary:the remote causes of the war.
  5. slight;
    unlikely:a remote chance they might hear our faint radio signals.
  6. reserved in manner:She was polite but very remote when I met her.
  7. Telecommunicationsoperating or controlled from a distance, as by remote control:remote operation of machinery.

n. [countable]
  1. Show Businessa broadcast originating from outside a radio or television studio.
  2. Sound Reproductionremote control (def. 2).
re•mote•ness, n. [uncountable]See -mot-.

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
re•mote  (ri mōt),USA pronunciation adj., -mot•er, -mot•est, n. 
adj. 
  1. far apart;
    far distant in space;
    situated at some distance away:the remote jungles of Brazil.
  2. out-of-the-way;
    secluded:a remote village; a remote mountaintop.
  3. distant in time:remote antiquity.
  4. distant in relationship or connection:a remote ancestor.
  5. Telecommunicationsoperating or controlled from a distance, as by remote control:a remote telephone answering machine.
  6. far off;
    abstracted;
    removed:principles remote from actions.
  7. not direct, primary, or proximate;
    not directly involved or influential:the remote causes of the war.
  8. slight or faint;
    unlikely:not the remotest idea; a remote chance.
  9. reserved and distant in manner;
    aloof;
    not warmly cordial.

n. 
  1. Radio and Television, Show Businessa broadcast, usually live, from a location outside a studio.
  2. See remote control (def. 2).
  • Latin remōtus, past participle of removēre to move back; see remove, motion
  • late Middle English 1375–1425
re•motely, adv. 
re•moteness, n. 
    2. sequestered, isolated, removed, apart, solitary. 8. inconsiderable. 9. withdrawn.
    1. close, near.

'remotely' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):

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