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Karim
"The farthest" vs. "the furthest"
Hello everybody! I need your help again guys!
I know that both "farthest" and "furthest" and superlative degrees of the word "far" and I completely understand that there are different. "Farthest" is used to denote physical distances directly, but "furthest" is used to denote distances in a non-physical or an abstract way. Okay, it's clean. But, what about this sentence?
Example:
"I commute the furthest out of all my colleagues".
I know that this sentence is grammatically correct, but could someone explain to me why. We're about a physical distance and not an abstract one. If yes, why do we say "furthest" in this example?
Thank you for your comments!:)
Jun 8, 2022 7:51 AM
Answers · 4
1
"I commute the furthest out of all my colleagues"
I've personally never seen it used in this way, and if I'm being honest, I don't know what you're trying to say.
Most native speakers can't tell the difference between the two words in terms of meaning, for the average person it's just a matter of pronunciation preference.
June 8, 2022
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Karim
Language Skills
English, French, Italian, Kazakh
Learning Language
English, French, Italian, Kazakh
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