Across would be a direct trip by a quick way from one side of the city to the other. Around could either be a meandering journey through various areas of the city or a circumnavigation of it.
OK. The same question about the sentence: They left for a journey across/around the USA.
If they are tourists and plan a meandering journey through various areas of the county, the preposition should be ‘around’, but they for instance are citizens of this country and moving to a new residential area, the proposition should be ‘across’, right?
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