English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From neighbor +‎ -ship. Cognate with Dutch nabuurschap (neighborship), Low German Naberschaft (neighborhood; neighborship), German Nachbarschaft (neighborship), Swedish naboskap (neighborship).

Noun

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neighborship (countable and uncountable, plural neighborships)

  1. The state or condition of being neighbors; a community, connection, or relationship between or among people and/or things which is based simply on living close geographically.
    • 1990, Carolyn Marvin, “Community and Class Order”, in When Old Technologies Were New[1], Oxford Univ. Press, →ISBN, page 66:
      … the telephone had introduced the "epoch of neighborship without propinquity."
  2. A community, connection, or relationship between or among people and/or things which is based simply on being of a similar class.
    • 2002 December 27, Cory Doctorow, “WiFi: What threat?”, in BoingBoing[2], retrieved 2012-02-01:
      The 802.11b spec takes pretty good care to enforce good neighborship on connected hosts.
    • 2010 February 10, Hanspeter Spek, President, Global Operations, “Sanofi-Aventis Q4 2009 Earnings Call Transcript”, in Seeking Alpha[3], retrieved 2012-02-05:
      But we believe that Cambridge is really the heart of oncology today. And we intend to benefit from this as an environment – as a neighborship.