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borough
[ bur-oh, buhr-oh ]
noun
- (in certain states of the U.S.) an incorporated municipality smaller than a city.
- one of the five administrative divisions of New York City.
- British.
- an urban community incorporated by royal charter, similar to an incorporated city or municipality in the U.S.
- a town, area, or constituency represented by a Member of Parliament.
- (formerly) a fortified town organized as and having some of the powers of an independent country.
- (in Alaska) an administrative division similar to a county in other states.
borough
/ ˈbʌrə /
noun
- a town, esp (in Britain) one that forms the constituency of an MP or that was originally incorporated by royal charter See also burgh
- any of the 32 constituent divisions that together with the City of London make up Greater London
- any of the five constituent divisions of New York City
- (in the US) a self-governing incorporated municipality
- (in medieval England) a fortified town or village or a fort
- (in New Zealand) a small municipality with a governing body
Word History and Origins
Origin of borough1
Word History and Origins
Origin of borough1
Example Sentences
Wirral is the first authority in Merseyside to adopt the robots and incorporate them into a formal offer for young people in the borough.
His father Fred ran a successful construction company in the outer boroughs of New York.
Trump has always been loathed in New York City, especially in his former home borough of Manhattan where the vote against him was and will be dependably over 80 percent.
Decades apart, Democratic presidential nominee Harris spent her early years in Oakland, California, and Republican nominee Trump was raised in the New York borough of Queens.
By Christmas of 2004, the numbers had doubled and by the time of the 2012 Olympics the event had expanded to every London borough.
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