The difference between One-horse town and The sticks

When used as nouns, one-horse town means a very small town, especially one of a rural nature and/or offering very few or no attractions, whereas the sticks means a remote, rural area.


check bellow for the other definitions of One-horse town and The sticks

  1. One-horse town as a noun (US, idiomatic):

    A very small town, especially one of a rural nature and/or offering very few or no attractions.

    Examples:

    "It's surrounded by beautiful wilderness, but otherwise it's just a one-horse town."

  1. The sticks as a noun (slang, pejorative):

    A remote, rural area; a place that is removed from civilization such as the boondocks. Possibly derived from 1800s stick = “tree”, “forest”, from English “stick”.

    Examples:

    "She grew up in the sticks and later moved to the city."

    "synonyms: backwoods boonies boondocks hinterland [[middle of nowhere]] ''see also: [[Thesaurus:remote place]]"

  2. The sticks as a noun (american football):

    The sets of yardage markers indicating the ten yards between the line of scrimmage from the previous first down and the line to gain the next first down.

    Examples:

    "They gained just enough on that play to move the sticks and continue the drive."

    "synonyms: the chains the yardsticks"