"Yonder" basically means "over there". It can refer to something within sight, "yonder valleys" or for an actual location "the pub over yonder". It appears that the first use of "yonder" was in the 14th century and come from Middle English.
"Yonder" is an old-fashioned or poetic way of indicating a place that is at a distance, often in the direction indicated. It is used to refer to something that is not nearby but within sight or in a certain direction.
Over there, at an indeterminate point in the distance.
to eat delicious tacos.
It means that we are Goin Up Yonder to Heaven to see my Lord In other words we are Goin to Heaven
There, or not here.
yonder and great both mean the same thing, large or power full
Shakespeare would disagree with categorizing this phrase as redneck. "What light through yonder window breaks"? Yonder is a reference to something in the distance. Down is the direction indicated. So, down yonder means something off in the distance in the direction indicated. This isn't an idiom or slang. It is literal. Even a redneck knows that.
Over there.
The English word "yonder" is most closely approximated in Spanish as "towards that way" or "asi alla"
'Did you go to the house over there?' Yonder means in the distance but within sight
Depending on the context, modern terms equivalent to "yonder" would include: away there over there out there far away distant further farther beyond --------------------- Yonder would imply that the 'place' that is 'younder' would be within sight.
Essentially, it means "over there". Example: The sheep herder said to his son, "Go yonder and find our missing sheep so that the flock is again complete."
Yonder is a synonym for "a long ways away". Yonder, in that small town, you can fill up on gas. The small village is over yonder by the mountains.
Yonder has 184 pages.