English edit

Etymology edit

metropolitan +‎ -ism

Noun edit

metropolitanism (usually uncountable, plural metropolitanisms)

  1. The quality or state of being metropolitan.
    • 1917, Sinclair Lewis, The Job[1]:
      She stayed at two or three places a day for at least one meal--hotels in tiny towns she had never heard of, and in larger towns that were fumbling for metropolitanism.
    • 1906, Zona Gale, Romance Island[2]:
      Bennietod was Bowery-born and office-bred, and this sad metropolitanism almost made of him a good philosopher.
    • 1899, William Archer, America To-day, Observations and Reflections[3]:
      But in the form of its expression it exemplified that illusion of metropolitanism which is to my mind the veriest cockneyism in disguise, and which cannot but strike Americans as either ridiculous or offensive.
    • 1857, Henry A. Murray, Lands of the Slave and the Free[4]:
      NOTE.—The Bytown mentioned in the foregoing chapter is now called Ottawa, and is a candidate, in conjunction with Montreal and Toronto, for the honour of permanent metropolitanism.