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Very far away, in the depths, isolated [glossary]Vocab questions, definitions, usage, etc |
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#2
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"The boondocks" is one of many expressions that have this general meaning.
Other common expressions here in the US include: the sticks the woods the back woods the back of beyond Podunk Timbuktu the middle of nowhere the hills |
#4
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Thank you, gentlemen!
"Podunk", esa nunca la había escuchado. Hay otras que son idénticas en inglés: "un lugar abandonado/dejado de la mano de Dios" (godforsaken place), donde la gran distancia puede ser psicológica. Otro de la región pampeana: "[lo mandó a/está en] la loma del c***/orto" (in the immense boredom of the plain a hillocky place is where a hamlet or a estancia would be to control the surroundings and avoid any risk of flood)
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#5
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"Podunk", "podunk", "East Podunk" and "Podunk Hollow" are North American; I don't know that they are used outside of the US and Canada.
Wikipedia claims that the word is from Algonquin (a native American language group), and one tribe of native people was called the "Podunk people". Today the word typically refers to a place of small size or in the middle of nowhere, and it may be used as an adjective ("podunk") or as a placeholder place name ("Podunk" and variations). Another placeholder place name is "Hicksville", which comes from the noun/adjective "hick" = someone/something from a small town. |
#6
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Thanks for that
I looked for "Podunk" in my collection of subtitles and I found one instance in episode 2 of fan supported web series Pioneer One (with excellent ratio quality/dollar, by the way): - "I just got off the phone with the science editor from The Times". - "As in New York Times?" - "No, as in South Podunk... Yeah, sorry, The New York Times".
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