urban- urb-, -urban, -urbia

(Latin: city)

A reference to a city that connotes cultivation, refinement, and elegance.

amburbial (adjective), more amburbial, most amburbial
1. A reference to the circuit, or journey, around a city: Many tourists have been making amburial walks or tours of Rome for centuries.
2. Etymology: from Latin ambi-, "around, both, in two ways"; which is directly related to ambo-, "both" + urbanus, "belonging to the city or town"; from urbs, urbis, "a city".
conurbation (s) (noun), conurbations (pl)
1. The gradual merging or combination of city areas together: "Some metropolitan planners call conurbation 'one vast megalopolis' ".

"There are more and more neighboring towns around the world that have spread into and blended with each other to form conurbations consisting of highly populated regions with sprawling areas of cities that are clustered together."

2. Etymology: from Latin con-, "together" + urbs, "city" + the English noun suffix -ation, "an action or process".
exurb
exurbanite
exurbia
interurban
interurbanite
penturban
Relating to the residential area or community beyond a city's suburbs.
penturbanite
People who live beyond the "normal" suburban areas.

Earliest citation: "To prevent runaway growth and conserve local resources, penturbanites demand judicious county planning. Penturban land is still available at bargain prices, so middle-income families can often afford to live on two-acre to five-acre sites.

To the caring conserver, the old buildings in penturban towns are neither unattractive nor useless, but rich in nostalgia and generally less expensive than new construction.

—Jack Lessinger, "The emerging region of opportunity",
American Demographics, June 1, 1987.
penturbia
Jack Lessinger, a retired University of Washington professor, introduced the term penturbia to readers of the Atlantic Monthly.

Penturbia was the fifth great region of colonization in the United States. This followed the movement into the central and southern colonies, then into the Mississippi and Ohio river valleys, then to the great industrial cities, and next into the suburbs of America.

Penturbia was beyond the normal commuting range of big U.S. cities. It included areas replete with farms, forests, lakes, and rivers. In penturbia, there were plenty of opportunities for fishing and golf.

—"B.C.'s penturbia booms" by Charlie Smith;
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suburb
1. A district lying immediately outside a city or town; especially, a smaller residential community.
2. Usually a residential region around a major city; the environs.
suburban
suburbanite
suburbanly
suburbia
1. A residential district located on the outskirts of a city.
2. Suburbs collectively, or the people who live in them.