The phrase "as far away as Timbuktu" is often used to denote a place that is extremely distant or remote. Timbuktu, a historical city in Mali, was once a significant center of trade and scholarship but is now perceived as isolated and difficult to reach. Thus, the phrase conveys a sense of being far removed from the familiar or known world, often used humorously or hyperbolically.
dayten thats what its is i want to make a shout out to my teachers professor chris and michelle
dayten thats what its is i want to make a shout out to my teachers professor chris and michelle
dayten thats what its is i want to make a shout out to my teachers professor chris and michelle
That means they live in far away place
Timbuktu in northern Mali, on the edge of the Sahara desert has had a long-lasting scholastic contribution to Islamic and world civilization. (Timbuktu is assumed to have had one of the first universities in the world, with 25,000 students back in the 1400s. Local scholars and collectors still boast an impressive collection of ancient Greek texts from that era.) It was known to early European culture and gained the status of a fabled city at the far end of the world - in the middle of the Sahara desert (and almost impossible to get to!). Thus the phrase "as far as Timbuktu" came to mean or indicate a place that is unimaginably far away, completely foreign, or unreachable - at the other end of the earth.
Timbuktu is approximately 4,000 miles away from your current location.
dayten thats what its is i want to make a shout out to my teachers professor chris and michelle
dayten thats what its is i want to make a shout out to my teachers professor chris and michelle
A place far away
It is a city in West Africa but as a slang term it means a place far, far away.
It means that the object is close or not too far away.