urban
31Urban — m English, Danish, Swedish, Polish, and Czech: from the Latin name Urbānus ‘city dweller’. This was borne by numerous early saints, and was adopted by several popes (who may have felt it to be particularly appropriate since they ruled from the… …
32Urban — Urban, Urbano Deux noms qui correspondent au nom de baptême Urbain, issu du nom de personne latin Urbanus (< urbs = ville). La première forme est le plus souvent allemande, fréquente en Alsace (mais parfois occitane), la seconde castillane.… …
33urban — ȕrbān prid. <odr. ī> DEFINICIJA 1. gradski 2. koji sadrži svojstva kulturnog, socijaliziranog i organiziranog života grada SINTAGMA urbani blues (izg. urbani blȗz) glazb. sofisticirani »gradski blues« nastao križanjem bluesa s jazzom,… …
34þurban — *þurban, *þurfan germ., Präterito Präsens: Verweis: s. *þerban s. þerban Ⅱ; …
35urban — [adj] city burghal, central, citified, civic, civil, downtown, inner city, metropolitan, municipal, nonrural, oppidan, popular, public, town, village; concept 536 Ant. country, rural, suburban …
36urban — Adj. (Mittelstufe) geh.: für die Stadt charakteristisch Synonym: städtisch Beispiel: Er zieht die urbane Lebensweise vor. Kollokation: urbane Gegend …
37urban — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ relating to or characteristic of a town or city. DERIVATIVES urbanism noun urbanist noun urbanize (also urbanise) verb. ORIGIN Latin urbanus, from urbs city …
38urban — [ʉr′bən] adj. [L urbanus < urbs, city] 1. of, in, constituting, or comprising a city or town 2. characteristic of the city as distinguished from the country; citified ☆ 3. in U.S. census use, designating or of an incorporated or unincorporated …
39Urban II — [ʉr′bən] 1042? 99; pope (1088 99) …
40Urban — 1. Aber potz Urban s Leiden, was hilft s, wenn keine Kraft hernach folgt. – Eiselein, 391. Sanct Urban ist Schutzpatron der Winzer und Trunkenbolde. Lat.: Aut minus animi, aut plus potentiae. (Eiselein, 391.) 2. An Urban der Hirse gut gerathen… …