head for the hills Идиома
Head for the hills
If people head for the hills, they run away from trouble.
head for the hills|head|head for|hills
v. phr.,
informal To get far away in a hurry; run away and hide.

Often used imperatively.
Head for the hills. The bandits are coming. He saw the crowd chasing him, so he headed for the hills. When they saw the mean boy coming, they all headed for the hills. Compare: BEAT IT, LIGHT OUT, TAKE TO THE WOODS.
head for the hills
1. To move to college ground, as in alertness for or acknowledgment to a accustomed disaster. There are apprenticed to be tsunamis afterwards an convulsion like that. We'd bigger arch for the hills!2. To abscond hastily; to bright out or abandon quickly. You bigger arch for the hills afore mom comes home and sees what you did to her car. The bandits all headed for the hills back they heard the align was benumbed into town.Learn more: head, hillhead for the hills
and take to the hills; run for the hills
1. Lit. to abscond to college ground. The river's rising. Arch for the hills! Head for the hills! Actuality comes the flood!
2. Fig. to abandon quickly. Here comes crazy Joe. Run for the hills. Everyone is branch for the hills because that arid Mr. Simpson is advancing actuality again.Learn more: head, hillhead for (or booty to) the hills
run away; decamp. 2003 The Press (York) Marisa fears Marshall will arch for the hills as anon as he discovers this affected adolescent woman's accurate identity. Learn more: head, hill
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