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Noun edit

conurbia (countable and uncountable, plural conurbias)

  1. Conurbations as represented or encapsulated by their typical qualities or characteristics.
    • 1962, Western Resources Papers, volume 3, page 81:
      Just as the village and the town were dependent upon the water and land about them, so our modern urbias, suburbias, and conurbias are dependent upon the natural resources they can command.
    • 1970, Richard Pipes, Europe Since 1815, page 197:
      The result were urban clusters — "conurbia," or "megalopolises" as they are called today. Where this occurred, the usual distinction between town and country lost meaning.
    • 1987, International Journal of Materials & Product Technology:
      Since ceramic materials and production know-how are found in at least 1 16 different locales throughout the Japanese archipelago, the fine ceramics industry has tended to develop outside the congested areas of the Kanto-Kansai conurbia.
    • 1993, Wallace Stegner, American Places:
      In our first years here, though we had neighbors within a comfortable half mile, we could see not a single light at night except stars and moon and the glow on the sky above the valley conurbia.

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