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Word Meanings - MUNICIPALITY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A municipal district; a borough, city, or incorporated town or village.

Related words: (words related to MUNICIPALITY)

  • VILLAGERY
    Villages; a district of villages. "The maidens of the villagery." Shak.
  • BOROUGH
    burh, burg; akin to Icel., Sw., & Dan. borg, OS. & D. burg, OHG. puruc, purc, MHG. burc, G. burg, Goth. baúrgs; and from the root of AS. beorgan to hide, save, defend, G. bergen; or perh. from that of AS. beorg hill, mountain. Bury, v. t., and
  • MUNICIPALLY
    In a municipal relation or condition.
  • DISTRICT
    Rigorous; stringent; harsh. Punishing with the rod of district severity. Foxe.
  • INCORPORATED
    United in one body; formed into a corporation; made a legal entity.
  • BOROUGHHEAD
    See HEADBOROUGH
  • MUNICIPALISM
    Municipal condition.
  • BOROUGHMONGERING; BOROUGHMONGERY
    The practices of a boroughmonger.
  • INCORPORATE
    1. Not consisting of matter; not having a material body; incorporeal; spiritual. Moses forbore to speak of angles, and things invisible, and incorporate. Sir W. Raleigh. 2. Not incorporated; not existing as a corporation; as, an incorporate banking
  • MUNICIPALIZE
    To bring under municipal oversight or control; as, a municipalized industry. London people are now determined to centralize and to municipalize such services. The Century.
  • VILLAGER
    An inhabitant of a village. Brutus had rather be a villager Than to repute himself a son of Rome Under these hard condition. Shak.
  • BOROUGHHOLDER
    A headborough; a borsholder.
  • DISTRICTION
    Sudden display; flash; glitter. A smile . . . breaks out with the brightest distriction. Collier.
  • INCORPORATIVE
    Incorporating or tending to incorporate; as, the incorporative languages which run a whole phrase into one word. History demonstrates that incorporative unions are solid and permanent; but that a federal union is weak. W. Belsham.
  • BOROUGH-ENGLISH
    A custom, as in some ancient boroughs, by which lands and tenements descend to the youngest son, instead of the eldest; or, if the owner have no issue, to the youngest brother. Blackstone.
  • INCORPORATION
    1. The act of incorporating, or the state of being incorporated. 2. The union of different ingredients in one mass; mixture; combination; synthesis. 3. The union of something with a body already existing; association; intimate union; assimilation;
  • DISTRICTLY
    Strictly. Foxe.
  • INCORPORATOR
    One of a number of persons who gets a company incorporated; one of the original members of a corporation.
  • BOROUGHMASTER
    The mayor, governor, or bailiff of a borough.
  • BOROUGHMONGER
    One who buys or sells the parliamentary seats of boroughs.
  • REDISTRICT
    To divide into new districts.
  • DISINCORPORATE
    1. To deprive of corporate powers, rights, or privileges; to divest of the condition of a corporate body. 2. To detach or separate from a corporation. Bacon.
  • HEADBOROUGH; HEADBORROW
    A petty constable. (more info) 1. The chief of a frankpledge, tithing, or decennary, consisting of ten families; -- called also borsholder, boroughhead, boroughholder, and sometimes tithingman. See Borsholder. Blackstone.
  • GAINSBOROUGH HAT
    A woman's broad-brimmed hat of a form thought to resemble those shown in portraits by Thomas Gainsborough, the English artist (1727-
  • RED-LIGHT DISTRICT
    A district or neighborhood in which disorderly resorts are frequent; -- so called in allusion to the red light kept in front of many such resorts at night.
  • DISINCORPORATION
    Deprivation of the rights and privileges of a corporation. T. Warton.
  • REINCORPORATE
    To incorporate again.

 

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