When an idea seems like it comes from outer space.
What is right on the moon?
Broken down into individual words, quite is “completely”, on is an adverb usually equivalent to “on”, and the moon is the definitive article of “moon”.
So the literal meaning of this phrase is “completely on the moon”.
A more natural way to say it in English might be “all the way to the moon” or “gone to the moon”, depending on the context in which it’s used.
Since going to the moon is a relatively uncommon event, it’s unsurprising that right on the moon is also an idiom. But it’s not the same as the English expression “over the moon” which is particularly popular in British sports punditry.
Totally on the moon rather means “without sense or logic”. It can be used to describe a decision you agree with, or sometimes a performance: The judge was absolutely over the moon is loosely “the referee was all over the place”, which brings us nicely back around to sports.
Why do I need to know right on the moon?
Danish has several informal expressions used to mean something absurd or incomprehensible. As well as completely on the moon, you can say something is far out or quite far out (“far off”) if you find it absurd, ridiculous or indefensible. So it seems there’s a link between something being very far away and it making little sense.
A popular Norwegian expression, all Texas, has a similar meaning, although it seems to relate more to a physical situation than a concept or decision.
Although Texas is no closer to Denmark than it is to Norway, I’ve never heard a Dane say all Texas.
Example
This calculation is completely on the moon. It simply doesn’t add up.
These calculations are bewildering. They just don’t add up.
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