backwood

adj
/ˈbækˌwʊd/US

Etymology

From back + wood; compare backwater.

  1. derived from *h₁weydʰh₁-
  2. inherited from *widuz
  3. inherited from *widu
  4. inherited from wudu
  5. inherited from wode
  6. compounded as backwood — “back + wood

Definitions

  1. Native to or located in a remote rural location.

    • The house itself, although far more spacious and comfortable than the majority of backwood farmhouses, was built in the usual fashion, of solid logs, and was evidently designed to resist attack.
    • Despite the court victory, Archer resigned as deputy chairman and rehabilitated himself by working as a party stalwart in backwood constituencies.
  2. Rustic, unsophisticated, countrified.

    • Here, after supper, most of the company stretched themselves in backwood style, before the fire; but Washington was shown into a bedroom.
    • "That's what you mean, dandy boy — for you're only a dandy boy, you know, and they don't get married to backwood Southern girls."

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for backwood. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA