ride off on a side issue

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ostap77

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Did you ever use or hear other people use the expression "to ride off on a side issue" in conversation?
 
Where have you heard it, ostap?
 
I haven't heard it. I came across it in a dictionary. I just wanted to know if it's actually used in speech.
 
Which dictionary was it in? Which word were you looking up when you found it?
 
I was looking for the word 'issue'. I found it in a English-Russian phrase book published in Moscow, which was the reason why I wanted to find out if it's widely used in conversation. Based on your answer, I figure it might be rarely used or could've been "invented" by the author.
 
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... I figure it might be rearly used ...

You mean "rarely used". I think the author invented it or they had heard it once and decided to put it in the phrase book. Given the answers you have had on this thread, I think you now know that it's not a recognised phrase.
 
I appreciate you correcting me.:up: According to the phrase book it's supposed to mean something like "to get off track and start talking about an unimportant thing".
 
As a Russian guy, I'd suggest you avoid English-Russian dictionaries :-D
 
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In fact,I usually do. It's just that I happen to skim through them out of curiosity.
 
I haven't heard it either, but I do think it's a good phrase.
 
I've never heard it, but the meaning is clear.
 
Does it mean something like "to get off track and start talking about an unimportant thing"?
 
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Well, whether it is "unimportant" is an opinion. I would say a different thing.
 
Would it make sense to you, if I said "to ride somebody off on a side issue"?
 
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