one-horse town
English
Etymology
The term "one-horse" originated as an agricultural phrase, meaning 'to be drawn/worked by a single horse.' This led to the use of this phrase in a metaphorical sense as something that is small or insignificant. Charles Dickens explained in his publication All the Year Round (1871): 'One horse' is an agricultural phrase, applied to anything small or insignificant, or to any inconsiderable or contemptible person: as a 'one-horse town,' a 'one-horse bank,' a 'one-horse hotel,' a 'one-horse lawyer', [etc.]
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
one-horse town (plural one-horse towns)
- (US, idiomatic) A very small town, especially one of a rural nature and/or offering very few or no attractions.
- It's surrounded by beautiful wilderness, but otherwise it's just a one-horse town.
Synonyms
- backwater, bump in the road, jerkwater town, one-blink town, Podunk, boondocks, the sticks, backwoods, middle of nowhere
- See also: Thesaurus:remote place
Translations
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