Skip to content

metropolitan

noun

  1. person from a metropolis
L37376 on Wikidata ↗

adjective

  1. from or related to a metropolis
L37377 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /mɛtɹəˈpɒlɪtən/ / [-tn̩] / /ˌmɛtɹəˈpɑlɪtən/

adj

Etymology: From Late Latin metropolitanus, from Ancient Greek μητροπολίτης (mētropolítēs).

  1. Pertaining to the see or province of a metropolitan.
  2. Of, or pertaining to, a metropolis or other large urban settlement.

    But the one [letter] in the unknown script and with a metropolitan post mark—could it be from some London Woman? In spite of having lived in the country all her life and for the most part in remote Devon, Miss Tilehurst had always understood that such beings really existed.

  3. Of or pertaining to the parent state of a colony or territory, or the home country, e.g. metropolitan France

    Policies relating to the elimination of racial discrimination which obtain in metropolitan New Zealand are applicable in the Tokelau Islands.

    the new political status of these islands marks a definite break with the traditional Dutch colonial practice to keep its Caribbean colonies at a distance; and, after 2010, Dutch metropolitan laws and dministrative practices started being implemented on the islands.

name

  1. The Metropolitan Line of London Underground, which has its ancestry in the Metropolitan Railway.

noun

Etymology: From Late Latin metropolitanus, from Ancient Greek μητροπολίτης (mētropolítēs).

  1. A bishop empowered to oversee other bishops; an archbishop.

    I knovv God by Miracle can inſtruct Kings, as he rained Mannah, and raiſed the Apoſtles from letterless Fiſher-men, to learned Metropolitans, and profound Doctours.

    She was in love with all the new royal princes and princesses, who entered into family relationship with the imperial family; she had been in love with a metropolitan, with a vicar, and with a priest.

  2. The inhabitant of a metropolis.