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Maxim
Are "in the middle of nowhere" and "in the back of beyond" synonymous?
Aug 27, 2021 9:29 AM
Answers · 3
3
Yes I would use these two expressions interchangeably.
In fact just last week I spent 2 nights on an island in Scotland in a small house, in a very small village, at the end of a one-track road which didn't lead anywhere else. Either of these expressions would perfectly describe where I was staying.
It was very beautiful there though, and the people were very friendly. 😊
August 27, 2021
Yes, they are much the same. They both mean in a remote/ far away place, in the middle of nothingness/nowhere.
Alice Springs (town) is in the middle of nowhere. Coober Pedy (township) is also in the back of beyond; well a thousand k's north of Adelaide, which might be the same thing to some people. (Adelaide, South Australia = nothingness to some people).
Шутка.
August 27, 2021
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Maxim
Language Skills
English, French, Russian
Learning Language
English, French
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