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With paths it's easier ... "he travelled on the road between A and B" ... though using sequential letters may through you off here (try instead: "he travelled on the road between Paris and Berlin for months")
With surfaces even easier ... "he travelled in Germany" (which to the alert reader is the zone that lies roughly between A and B)
They did some research in Franken and asked people about the direction to the next village and found correlation between the relative age of the villages and the prepositions used to describe the way. So "over there, " the other village was younger, and "back there" the village was older. Funny eh.
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