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boondocks

[ US /ˈbunˌdɑks/ ]
[ UK /bˈuːndɒks/ ]
NOUN
  1. a remote and undeveloped area

How To Use boondocks In A Sentence

  • You're a millionaire call while in a phone booth in Creeksville-in-the-Boondocks.
  • You and I know that any prolonged stint in those boondocks is pretty demoralizing. THE ENDLESS GAME
  • I don't think anyone should sit around and say, ‘I don't care that people who live in the boondocks and are dialing in over a modem can't access my site.’
  • So understanding why new businesses do or don't emerge in the boondocks is essential to my career and the well-being of my family.
  • Instead I apologise, saying I have been out in the boondocks with Gary on some crazy mission.
  • He promptly sent ‘The Boondocks’ off to make the rounds of the news syndicates, and Universal picked him up.
  • 3. Abbreviated form of the word boondocks: the most remote part or parts of our country. Surviving Australia
  • A rich media company buying up small stations in the boondocks might easily invest a lot of money in those stations to improve their news programs.
  • And I don't reside in the boondocks where there are no services; I live in one of the biggest, most business-oriented suburbs of Chicago.
  • The first guy landed about halfway down the mat and went sailing out into the boondocks tearing off his gear and banging up his airplane rather badly.
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