You can drive the value behind it. in the reference book on phraseology. You may be interested in knowing the lexical, literal or figurative meaning of these words

“Drive beyond Mozhai” - this saying was not accidentally born in the mists of time. It means to drive the enemy out of Russian lands, to drive him out!
When many people hear about Mozhaisk, the first thing they remember is Borodino and the war with Napoleon. However, Mozhaisk more than once became a fortress on the path of the enemies of our country. Mozhaisk has been a warrior city since ancient times. But here I decided to touch on one war, one page of history...

It was a holy war, it was a people’s war... Surely most of us, residents of a huge country, had someone from our family at the front. That war affected every home, every family. They fought for the Motherland, they fought for the future, they fought for us...
Personally, from the first days of the war, I had two grandfathers at the front (who died in fierce battles) and one great-grandfather, who walked from Moscow to Berlin and returned home. The war seemed to sweep across our country with a huge scythe, sparing no one... And even now, six decades later, here and there it reminds of itself.
But we won that war! At a huge cost, but we won! Great people of a great country.
Our job, the job of our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, is to prevent a repetition of that terrible War and to preserve the Eternal Memory of those who made our victory possible, who at the cost of their lives gave us the opportunity to live.
From the first day of the fascist march across our Motherland, many cities and villages were turned into battle arenas; the Germans marched on Moscow, sweeping away everything in their path! This time, handing over Moscow to the enemy was simply unthinkable; the enemy had to be stopped! And so the city of Mozhaisk stood in the way of the “damned horde”.

Historical reference:

June 22, 1941. Together with all the people, the inhabitants of ancient Mozhaisk joined the ranks of the fighters of the Great Patriotic War. The entire life of the city was subject to the military rhythm.
In the summer of 1941, when there was a threat of the capture of Moscow, by decision of the State Defense Committee, the construction of the Mozhaisk line of defense began, on the lines of which Soviet troops detained and exhausted the selected forces of the Army of the Center group in battles.
In October 1941, Hitler’s troops focused their main efforts on withdrawing their troops to the Minsk Highway, along which they hoped to quickly break through to Moscow. The fighting was especially fierce in the area of ​​Yelnya and Artemsk. From October 13 to 18, the enemy continuously launched desperate assaults on the positions of the Mozhaisk defense line, but could not advance. The Soviet units fought heroically, delaying the advance of the Nazis in the Mozhaisk direction for five days. But on October 18, having broken through the defenses, fascist troops burst into the streets of Mozhaisk.
The main result of the battles near Mozhaisk in October 1941 was the time gained - almost a week. During these days, the Soviet command managed to pull up its reserves to dangerous directions, which subsequently finally stopped the enemy near Moscow.
During the occupation, four partisan detachments operated in the Mozhaisk region. In Mozhaisk there is a street named after the people's avengers: the street of the Red Partisans.
On January 19, having bypassed Mozhaisk from the north and south, troops of the 5th Army approached the city, creating a threat of encirclement by Nazi troops and forcing them to a hasty retreat. Early in the morning of January 20, the city was stormed from three sides.
In different parts of the city, on mass graves there are monuments to soldiers who died in battles on Mozhaisk soil during the Great Patriotic War. In the center of the city, in the park, there is a monument to Colonel V.I. Polosukhin, commander of the 32nd Infantry Division, which took part in the battles on the Borodino field in the fall of 1941 and in the liberation of the Mozhaisk region.
Throughout the Mozhaisk region there are numerous monuments to heroic soldiers who fought on Mozhaisk land for the liberation of their Fatherland.
Mozhaisk.ru

To this day, the forests around Mozhaisk keep traces of the Great Patriotic War. Funnel pits have not surprised anyone for a long time. A candlestick or a homemade bell made from a spent cartridge at someone's local dachas is a common occurrence. And if you want, you can try to find the partisan dugouts. They are in the forest, not far from the village of Pereshchapovo (if you move towards the Mozhaisk reservoir, they were there three years ago). Yes... Echo of War...
There are many monuments to those killed on the war fronts in the Mozhaisk region. Everything is well-groomed, there are always new wreaths, fresh flowers, freshly painted fences and benches nearby. In general, people look after us, and I bow to them for this.
So let the Memory always live in us!
As they say - To Remember.

* * *
If you bring flowers with you, that will be great.

“Drive beyond Mozhai” - this saying was not accidentally born in the mists of time. It means to drive the enemy out of Russian lands, to drive him out!
When many people hear about Mozhaisk, the first thing they remember is Borodino and the war with Napoleon. However, Mozhaisk more than once became a fortress on the path of the enemies of our country. Mozhaisk has been a warrior city since ancient times. But here I decided to touch on one war, one page of history...

It was a holy war, it was a people’s war... Surely most of us, residents of a huge country, had someone from our family at the front. That war affected every home, every family. They fought for the Motherland, they fought for the future, they fought for us...
Personally, from the first days of the war, I had two grandfathers at the front (who died in fierce battles) and one great-grandfather, who walked from Moscow to Berlin and returned home. The war seemed to sweep across our country with a huge scythe, sparing no one... And even now, six decades later, here and there it reminds of itself.
But we won that war! At a huge cost, but we won! Great people of a great country.
Our job, the job of our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, is to prevent a repetition of that terrible War and to preserve the Eternal Memory of those who made our victory possible, who at the cost of their lives gave us the opportunity to live.
From the first day of the fascist march across our Motherland, many cities and villages were turned into battle arenas; the Germans marched on Moscow, sweeping away everything in their path! This time, handing over Moscow to the enemy was simply unthinkable; the enemy had to be stopped! And so the city of Mozhaisk stood in the way of the “damned horde”.

Historical reference:

June 22, 1941. Together with all the people, the inhabitants of ancient Mozhaisk joined the ranks of the fighters of the Great Patriotic War. The entire life of the city was subject to the military rhythm.
In the summer of 1941, when there was a threat of the capture of Moscow, by decision of the State Defense Committee, the construction of the Mozhaisk line of defense began, on the lines of which Soviet troops detained and exhausted the selected forces of the Army of the Center group in battles.
In October 1941, Hitler’s troops focused their main efforts on withdrawing their troops to the Minsk Highway, along which they hoped to quickly break through to Moscow. The fighting was especially fierce in the area of ​​Yelnya and Artemsk. From October 13 to 18, the enemy continuously launched desperate assaults on the positions of the Mozhaisk defense line, but could not advance. The Soviet units fought heroically, delaying the advance of the Nazis in the Mozhaisk direction for five days. But on October 18, having broken through the defenses, fascist troops burst into the streets of Mozhaisk.
The main result of the battles near Mozhaisk in October 1941 was the time gained - almost a week. During these days, the Soviet command managed to pull up its reserves to dangerous directions, which subsequently finally stopped the enemy near Moscow.
During the occupation, four partisan detachments operated in the Mozhaisk region. In Mozhaisk there is a street named after the people's avengers: the street of the Red Partisans.
On January 19, having bypassed Mozhaisk from the north and south, troops of the 5th Army approached the city, creating a threat of encirclement by Nazi troops and forcing them to a hasty retreat. Early in the morning of January 20, the city was stormed from three sides.
In different parts of the city, on mass graves there are monuments to soldiers who died in battles on Mozhaisk soil during the Great Patriotic War. In the center of the city, in the park, there is a monument to Colonel V.I. Polosukhin, commander of the 32nd Infantry Division, which took part in the battles on the Borodino field in the fall of 1941 and in the liberation of the Mozhaisk region.
Throughout the Mozhaisk region there are numerous monuments to heroic soldiers who fought on Mozhaisk land for the liberation of their Fatherland.
Mozhaisk.ru

To this day, the forests around Mozhaisk keep traces of the Great Patriotic War. Funnel pits have not surprised anyone for a long time. A candlestick or a homemade bell made from a spent cartridge at someone's local dachas is a common occurrence. And if you want, you can try to find the partisan dugouts. They are in the forest, not far from the village of Pereshchapovo (if you move towards the Mozhaisk reservoir, they were there three years ago). Yes... Echo of War...
There are many monuments to those killed on the war fronts in the Mozhaisk region. Everything is well-groomed, there are always new wreaths, fresh flowers, freshly painted fences and benches nearby. In general, people look after us, and I bow to them for this.
So let the Memory always live in us!
As they say - To Remember.

* * *
If you bring flowers with you, that will be great.

DRIVE OVER MOZHAI.

The history of the expression to drive someone beyond Mozhai is as follows: on August 20, Minin and Pozharsky led their regiments under the walls of Moscow and set up camp at the Arbat Gate, just a day ahead of the troops of Hetman Khodkevich, who were rushing to the aid of the Polish garrison. The hetman immediately attacked the militia camp, but was repulsed. The decisive battle under the walls of the Kremlin took place a day later. The outcome of the desperate cavalry cutting and hand-to-hand combat of the infantry was not clear for a long time. Until a detachment of selected Russian noble cavalry, led by the commoner Minin (an unprecedented case in history!), overthrew the Polish companies with a dashing attack. The general attack of the Russian regiments that followed this forced the hetman to order a retreat, which developed into a panicked flight. Abandoning all the guns and the entire convoy, Khodkevich stopped only near Mozhaisk (since then there has been a saying among the people to drive beyond Mozhaisk) and soon went home. That is, to drive beyond Mozhai - to completely break, to put an end to someone or something; modern usage also means “it is unfair to hinder someone or something.” Today this expression can also be used to mean “beyond 101 kilometers,” that is, to settlements where there is no active public life.

Mozhaev - perhaps from the name of the inhabitants of Mozhaisk or from the dialect Mozhai - “a skillful, capable and strong (mighty) person.”

Very far. Mozhay - colloquial form of the toponym Mozhaisk. According to some versions, the phraseological unit arose during the retreat of Napoleon’s army from Russia.

Handbook of phraseology. 2012

See also interpretations, synonyms, meanings of the word and what it means to DRIVE FOR MOZHAI. in Russian in dictionaries, encyclopedias and reference books:

  • DRIVE
    - 1) sell stolen goods, 2) send civilian workers to their relatives for...
  • DRIVE in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    , -I’m chasing, -I’m chasing; -al, -ala, -alo; driven; driven owls 1. someone or something. Drive, force to enter somewhere, move somewhere. 3. sheep in the barn. ...
  • BEHIND in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    someone-what and by whom-what, preposition with wine. and TV clause I .1. On the other side, outside, behind someone. Step over the threshold. ...
  • DRIVE in the Complete Accented Paradigm according to Zaliznyak:
    drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive, drive those who have driven, who have driven, who have driven, who have driven, who have driven, who have driven, who have driven, ...
  • DRIVE in the New Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language by Efremova:
    1. owl trans. 1) Bring a horse to exhaustion with a fast, long ride, or an animal with a race or pursuit. 2) transfer Torment with petty...
  • DRIVE in Lopatin’s Dictionary of the Russian Language:
  • DRIVE in the Complete Spelling Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    drive, drive, drive; past -al, -ala, ...
  • DRIVE in the Spelling Dictionary:
    drive, drive, drive; past -`al, -al`a, ...
  • DRIVE
    Non-st == sell N1 Decided h. coat. drive, tire, exhaust Z. horse. Z. all subordinates (translated). drive, force...
  • BEHIND in Ozhegov’s Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    2 over any limit He is over forty. The conversation went past midnight. The frost is already thirty degrees. for 2 sake, in...
  • MOZHAY in Dahl's Dictionary:
    G. …
  • DRIVE in Dahl's Dictionary:
    see drive...
  • FOR in Dahl's Dictionary:
    sentence with wine and creativity | With an accusative to the question Where, shows the limit of movement behind, behind, outside of what. Behind the night...
  • DRIVE
    I'll drive you, you'll drive me, past. drove, drove, drove, owl. (to drive). 1. someone or something. To force someone to enter somewhere, to force them inside. Drive the cattle into the yard. ...
  • BEHIND in Ushakov’s Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    grasps at straws. Proverb. 2. for what. To take something, to start something. do (colloquial fam.). He takes on any task. They grab onto the most...
  • BEHIND in Ushakov’s Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    (without stress, except in those cases when the stress from the noun is transferred to the preposition, for example, by the nose, beyond the sea), preposition with creative. ...
  • DRIVE in Ephraim's Explanatory Dictionary:
    drive 1. owls trans. 1) Bring a horse to exhaustion with a fast, long ride, or an animal with a race or pursuit. 2) transfer Torture...
  • DRIVE in the New Dictionary of the Russian Language by Efremova:
    I owls trans. 1. Bring a horse to exhaustion with a fast, long ride, or an animal with a race or pursuit. 2. transfer Torment with petty...
  • DRIVE in the Large Modern Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    I owls trans. see drive I II owls. trans. decomposition see drive II III owls. trans. decomposition 1. Bring to...
  • PUSH YOUR CLOTHES in the Dictionary of Thieves' Slang:
    - sell...
  • DRIVE UNDER THE BUNK in the Dictionary of Thieves' Slang:
    - humiliate …
  • GET THE FOOL UNDER YOUR SKIN in the Dictionary of thieves' jargon.
  • PUT INTO A BUBBLE, BOTTLE in the Dictionary of Thieves' Slang:
    - get a person out of...
  • DROP JUNK LIKE RAG in the Dictionary of Thieves' Slang:
    - sell stolen goods as...
  • TENNESSEE SPOTTED TRIN in the Encyclopedia of Dogs.
  • MOORHUHN in the Directory of Secrets of games, programs, equipment, movies, Easter eggs:
    Moorhuhn 2 One shot at a spider will give you 50 points. Two more shots 100 points. You can get a lot of points for...
  • RUSSIAN PROVERBS in Wiki Quotation Book.
  • OUTSIDED in Wiki Quotebook:
    Data: 2008-08-24 Time: 18:16:36 He did not condemn anyone hastily, without delving into the circumstances of the case. He said: “Let us trace the path along which...
  • UNTAMABLE PLANET in the Wiki Quotebook:
    Data: 2009-08-30 Time: 10:32:27 """Quotes from the novel “The Indomitable Planet” * ... and there was a desert planet, a planet of death, where the living died, ...
  • VAMPIRE in Wiki Quotebook:
    Data: 2009-07-22 Time: 07:47:27 Vampires (ghouls?, ghouls) - or. In folklore, the term is usually used in relation to a blood-sucking creature...
  • ACID in Miller's Dream Book, dream book and interpretation of dreams:
    Drinking some kind of acid is an unfavorable dream that brings you a lot of anxiety. For a woman, drinking acidic liquids means that she can…
  • MOZHAEV in the Encyclopedia of Russian surnames, secrets of origin and meanings:
  • MOZHAEV in the Encyclopedia of Surnames:
    The surname is known to all connoisseurs of modern Russian literature thanks to the work of the writer Boris Mozhaev. A “geographical” surname: Mozhay was the name given to the city of Mozhaisk, famous...
  • BAZHANOV SERGEY PETROVICH in the Orthodox Encyclopedia Tree:
    Open Orthodox encyclopedia "TREE". Bazhanov Sergei Petrovich (1883 - 1937), archpriest, martyr. Memory October 18, ...
  • UKRAINIAN SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLIC
    Soviet Socialist Republic, Ukrainian SSR (Ukrainian Radyanska Socialistichna Respublika), Ukraine (Ukraine). I. General information The Ukrainian SSR was formed on December 25, 1917. With the creation ...
  • UNITED STATES OF AMERICA in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    States of America (USA). I. General information The USA is a state in North America. Area 9.4 million...
  • RUSSIAN SOVIET FEDERAL SOCIALIST REPUBLIC, RSFSR in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB.
  • CENSORSHIP PENALTIES in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    Accounting for penalties imposed on the C. seal can only be kept since 1862, when, with the advent of “temporary rules for censorship,” the Highest...
  • BEGIN in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    worry. CONCRETE see concreting. BANDAGE, -S see bandage. PICK UP, -SIA see pick up, -SIA. CLOGGED, -th, -th; -it. Exhausted and intimidated. ...
  • DRIVE in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    , -yay, -yay; owls, whom (what) (colloquial). Same as drive (in 3 digits). 3. horse 3. all subordinates (translated). ...
  • JAPAN*
  • EMIGRATION
    Contents: I. General concepts. ? II. Historical sketch of E. from ancient times to the beginning of the 19th century. ? III. European E. ...
  • CENSORSHIP PENALTIES in the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedia:
    ? Accounting for penalties imposed on the C. seal can only be kept since 1862, when, with the advent of “temporary rules for censorship,” ...
  • FRANCE* in the Encyclopedia of Brockhaus and Efron.
  • FINLAND* in the Encyclopedia of Brockhaus and Efron.
  • FEUDALISM in the Encyclopedia of Brockhaus and Efron.
  • FACTORY LEGISLATION in the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedia:
    ? In our country, this name, not entirely correctly, means the entire department of legislation, which in the West bears a more appropriate name...