What is another word for urban environments?

Pronunciation: [ˈɜːbən ɛnvˈa͡ɪɹənmənts] (IPA)

Urban environments refer to the built-up areas of a city. Synonyms for urban environments include cityscapes, concrete jungles, metropolitan areas, built-up areas, and urban landscapes. The term 'cityscape' refers to the overall appearance of a city, including the buildings, roads, and other structures that make up the built environment. 'Concrete jungle' is a term that highlights the density of urban environments, while 'metropolitan area' describes a region where multiple cities or towns are closely linked. 'Built-up area' emphasizes the development and growth of urban areas, while 'urban landscape' encompasses the physical and visual aspects of an urban environment. These synonyms capture different aspects of urban environments, highlighting the diversity and complexity of urban living.

What are the hypernyms for Urban environments?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Urban environments

  • Like Christianity, Buddhism explained suffering. In forms that established themselves in China, Buddhism offered the same sort of comfort to bereaved survivors and victims of violence or of disease as Christian faith did in the Roman world. Buddhism of course originated in India, where disease incidence was probably always very high as compared with civilizations based in cooler climates; Christianity, too, took shape in the urban environments of Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria where the incidence of infectious disease was certainly very high as compared to conditions in cooler and less crowded places. From their inception, therefore, both faiths had to deal with sudden death by disease as one of the conspicuous facts of human life. Consequently, it is not altogether surprising that both religions taught that death was a release from pain, and a blessed avenue of entry upon a delightful afterlife where loved ones would be reunited, and earthly injustices and pains amply compensated for.
    William H. McNeill

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