We have no meanings for "remote times" in our records yet.
1 Such were the Lydian traditions with respect to the more remote times .
2 The lowest of Brahmanas also are residing there from very remote times .
3 Ages turned back through the days of buccaneering to the more remote times .
4 These movements, begun in those remote times , are still going on.
5 And so, after a while, you find yourself back to remote times and causes.
6 These plays are of very ancient composition, and their stories cast in remote times .
7 In India, standing armies have existed from remote times .
8 Spirits seem to have been served from remote times at the imperial and princely feasts.
9 I can't go into such remote times and regions.
10 I say SELDOM, for there have been instances known, in remote times , of people being convinced.
11 These customs had been handed down from remote times , with some modifications not essentially changing them.
12 A proliferation of tools allowed for increased productivity in those remote times of the inception of language.
13 Great Bedwyn was once a Parliamentary borough and, in more remote times still, a town of importance.
14 The baking of pottery is a proof that the use of fire was known in the most remote times .
15 Here and there, he found a shell, and realized that the desert, in remote times , had been a sea.
16 The name Wharram-le-Street reminds us forcibly of the existence in remote times of some great way over this tableland.
Other examples for "remote times"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Remote times through the time
Remote times across language varieties