• tate
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    fedilink
    1511 hours ago

    I’ve never heard “as the crow flies” used that way. It is always used to talk about distance, not direction.

    • geekwithsoul
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      English
      511 hours ago

      I’ve heard it used that way - basically taken to mean “It’s over that way in a straight line” but then usually followed by directions on how to get there via a twisty route because there’s no direct path there.

      • @thedirtyknapkin
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        15 hours ago

        huh, I’ve only ever heard it not attached to “over yonder”. for me it’s just a modifier to distance and direction to indicate you don’t account for terrain. “it’s about 5 miles south as the crow flies, but that river might give you hell”

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        510 hours ago

        I’ve heard “over yonder as the crow flies”, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard “over yonder as the crow the flies”.