English edit

Adjective edit

spacio-cultural (not comparable)

  1. Misspelling of spatiocultural.
    • 2005, David R. Diaz, Barrio Urbanism: Chicanos, Planning and American Cities, →ISBN:
      With the influx, though, suburbia began to engage in a different spacio-cultural vision of life.
    • 2011, Ralph Catts, Ian Falk, Ruth Wallace, Vocational Learning: Innovative Theory and Practice, →ISBN, page 261:
      The spacio-cultural dimensions of learning are highlighted by Wallace in relation to the interface of first nation cultural knowledge with that of first world economic culture, and notes that a 'harmonization' process is necessary when considering the changes involved in recontextualizing learnings for new contexts.
    • 2016, Viv Golding, Learning at the Museum Frontiers: Identity, Race and Power, →ISBN:
      The opening extract from Toni Morrison's novel Sula alludes to the balcony areas of white churches, cinemas, theatres and opera houses where Black people sat during the time of segregation in the USA, which were referred to in the 1900s as 'nigger heavens', reflecting a spacio-cultural distance and the separate experiences of Black and white communities.