Boondock

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the animated television show and comic strip, see The Boondocks.

Boondocks refers to a remote, usually brushy rural area. The expression was introduced to English by American military personnel serving in the Philippines during the early years of the 20th century. It derives from the Tagalog word bundok, meaning "mountain". It also carries the implication that it is "backward" or "unsophisticated"; hence taga-bundok "people who live in the hinterland": i.e., people who are backward or unsophisticated.

Boondocks or diminutively "the boonies" has since evolved into a more general American slang term for "the country" or any rural/wilderness location in general, regardless of topology or vegetation that is isolated and away from "the action" or the comforts and variety of urban life. A similar word, bundu is part of South African Slang.

Equipment suitable for traveling in the boondocks has been jokingly referred to as "boondockers".

A boondock has also come to mean a slight rise in elevation found in vegetated sandy landscapes, such as Colorado's San Luis Valley. Wind action on sand causes erosion on unvegetated terrain and deposition on the vegetated terrain which gradually rises in elevation, becoming low mounds perhaps 5 feet (1.5 m), which are sometimes used by coyotes for their dens.

In 1965, Billy Joe Royal had a hit song called "Down in the Boondocks", which is often heard on "oldies" radio programs.

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