far-reaching
far-reaching — adjective
1. describes something such as a decision, a change, or an event that affects a ver
describes something such as a decision, a change, or an event that affects a very large number of people or things across many different areas or over a long period
The mayor's far-reaching plan to improve public transport won support from all sides.
collocation: far-reaching plan / far-reaching reform
Ravi's research on water purification had far-reaching effects in three different countries.
In coastal cities, the far-reaching effects of climate change are becoming clear.
Few people understood how far-reaching the new trade agreement would be.
Hana's new book explores the far-reaching impact of social media on modern families.
- wide-ranging
emphasises covering many different topics or areas; slightly more concrete than far-reaching
- sweeping
suggests broad, complete, often dramatic change; stronger and more emphatic than far-reaching
- extensive
focuses on large scale or amount; may not imply deep, lasting influence like far-reaching does
- broad
general in scope; less dramatic and more neutral than far-reaching
文法句型
far-reaching + noun
be far-reaching
用法筆記
Typically used before abstract nouns expressing scope or influence (effects, consequences, changes, impact, implications, reforms, decisions). The word itself is never used as a verb.
常見錯誤
❌ 'His story seemed far-fetched and unrealistic.' (not 'far-reaching') — far-fetched means unlikely or hard to believe; far-reaching means having wide influence.