adjective, re·mot·er, re·mot·est.
- far apart; far distant in space; situated at some distance away: the remote jungles of Brazil.
- out-of-the-way; secluded: a remote village; a remote mountaintop.
- distant in time: remote antiquity.
- distant in relationship or connection: a remote ancestor.
- operating or controlled from a distance, as by remote control: a remote telephone answering machine.
- far off; abstracted; removed: principles remote from actions.
- not direct, primary, or proximate; not directly involved or influential: the remote causes of the war.
- slight or faint; unlikely: not the remotest idea; a remote chance.
- reserved and distant in manner; aloof; not warmly cordial.
noun
- Radio and Television. a broadcast, usually live, from a location outside a studio.
- remote control(def 2).
adjective
- located far away; distant
- far from any centre of population, society, or civilization; out-of-the-way
- distant in time
- distantly related or connecteda remote cousin
- removed, as from the source or point of action
- slight or faint (esp in the phrases not the remotest idea, a remote chance)
- (of a person’s manner) aloof or abstracted
- operated from a distance; remote-controlleda remote monitor
mid-15c., from Middle French remot or directly from Latin remotus “afar off, remote, distant in place,” past participle of removere “move back or away” (see remove (v.)). Related: Remotely; remoteness. Remote control “fact of controlling from a distance” is recorded from 1904; as a device which allows this from 1920.