What does get out of dodge mean?
Get out of dodge is an idiom that means “to quickly leave an unpleasant place or tense situation” (e.g., “After several weeks of freezing temperatures, we decided to get out of dodge and go someplace warmer”).
The phrase originated from when Dodge City, Kansas was a boomtown in the “Wild West” that attracted outlaws. It includes the phrasal verb “get out,” which means “to leave.”
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