Further

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Dr. Goodword
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Further

Postby Dr. Goodword » Thu Sep 20, 2018 8:26 am

• further •

Pronunciation: fêr-thêr • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective, adverb (comparative), verb

Meaning: 1. More distant in degree, time, or space, beyond, as 'the further gas station'. 2. Additional, as 'a further delay'. 3. (Verb) To advance, move forward, facilitate.

Notes: Further and farther are comparatives of far, synonyms in the adjectival and adverbial senses. Recently, however, a usage rule of thumb has popped up that we should use farther to refer to physical distances, reserving further for abstract distances, e.g. 'drive a mile farther' versus 'one further comment'. There is no historical basis for such a rule. The superlative of today's word is furthest.

In Play: Following the recent usage rule of thumb, we might say: "I will make but one comment further, Melbourne's house is the farther one, not the nearer." We may also use this word as a verb in such sentences as: "Constance Noring works to further her own best interests rather than the customers'."

Word History: Today's Good Word reflects an ultimate source in PIE por-ter-, source also of Greek protos "first, foremost", borrowed by English as a prefix in such words as Proto-Indo-European. This hypothetical root of this derivation is a reduced form of per-/por- "forward, before" that produced prepositions in all Indo-European languages: English for, German vor "before", French pour "for", Russian pered "before, in front of", Latin pro "for", and dozens more. However, it also went into the making of other parts of speech, like English first, and Latin privus "single, alone", whence English privy and private. (Without further ado, let's all thank our long-time contributor William Hupy for today's sometimes confusing Good Word.)
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Philip Hudson
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Re: Further

Postby Philip Hudson » Fri Sep 21, 2018 12:56 pm

The chorus of a gospel song:
"Farther along we'll know all about it
Farther along we'll understand why
Cheer up my brother live in the sunshine
We'll understand it all by and by,"
It is dark at night, but the Sun will come up and then we can see.


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