Well ours must be worse then, as we never get to use the distinction. :-)
>It is probably used interchangeably with 'further' here in the U.S. due to our poor education system and our tendancy to create a new language based solely on (incorrect) vernacular usage. :o)
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>>I don't know if this is what you're saying but I've always taken "farther" to refer only to distance in space, and "further" for other things, like degree of change, as you've put.
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>>OTOH, I've only ever see farther used much in American lit. and hardly ever used by a Brit. and, probably therefore, a kiwi or oz. We'd always say "further" for all pf them.
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>>>Further is more distant in degree, time, or space than someplace or something else.
>>>
>>>Usually used not for distance itself but in:
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>>>further from the truth
>>>don't discuss it further
>>>he is further along in his studies than she is
>>>
>>>It is often used in place of farther though in vernacular speech...
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>>>
>>>
>>>>>Is it further than Motueka (New Zealand) ???
>>>>
>>>>Not sure I got your joke. Did you mean to say "farther"?
- Whoever said that women are the weaker sex never tried to wrest the bedclothes off one in the middle of the night
- Worry is the interest you pay, in advance, for a loan that you may never need to take out.