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Citation Information
Ammer, Christine. "at the crossroads." Writer's Reference Center. Facts On File, Inc. Web. 15 Apr. 2025. <http://fofweb.infobase.com/wrc/Detail.aspx?iPin=DOC00095>.
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at the crossroads

Definition 
At a critical juncture or turning point. The place where two roads intersect has had special significance from ancient times. Some tribes used a crossroads as a place for religious sacrifices, and hence they came to be associated with execution. In Christian times, criminals and those who died by their own hand often were buried at a crossroads (since they could not be buried in consecrated ground). Crossroads also were a favorite spot for ambushes, highway robbery, and other nefarious deeds. The phrase "dirty work at the crossroads" crops up throughout the nineteenth century, as well as in a spate of twentieth-century murder mysteries. The idea of a figurative crossroads, a point of having to decide which road to take, is also very old. Erasmus quotes a fragment from the Greek poet Theognis's Elegies, dating from about 600 B.C., translated as "I stand at the crossroads."

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