释义 |
city I. \ˈsid.ē, -itē, -i\ noun (-es) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English citie, from Old French cité, from Latin civitat-, civitas, from civis citizen + -itat-, -itas -ity — more at home 1. archaic : an inhabited place : hamlet, village 2. a. : a large or important incorporated town or borough in Great Britain holding a royal charter and usually being the seat of an episcopacy — a title bearing traditional and honorary significance but not specific legal significance b. : a populous place : a place larger than a village or town : a large, prominent, or important center of population < the cities of the ancient world > specifically : a relatively permanent and highly organized center having a population with varied skills, lacking self-sufficiency in the production of food, and usually depending primarily on manufacture and commerce to satisfy the wants of its inhabitants < the city offers real cultural advantages > c. : city-state d. : a municipal corporation in the United States occupying a definite area and subject to the state from which it derives its powers and for which it exists as an area of local government governed under a legal charter by a mayor and council, by a commission, or by a city manager and council and being usually more populous than a town, borough, or village — see commission plan, council-manager plan e. : a Canadian municipality of the highest class varying in character in the different provinces f. : an administrative area centering in a municipality and set up under the protection of an international body (as the League of Nations) chiefly for the purpose of insuring freedom of trade and communication — see free city c 3. : the inhabitants or citizens of a city 4. : an aggregation of dwellings or other structures that is of such size or importance as to suggest a city < a trailer city of construction workers > < Radio City > II. noun slang : a thing, event, or situation that is strongly characterized by a specified feature or quality < the movie was shoot-out city > |