English

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Etymology

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From anti-urban.

Adjective

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antiurban (not comparable)

  1. (sociology) Showing a negative view of cities or city life
    • 1988 July 15, Lawrence Rand, “Funny Business: an entire evening with Ian Shoales”, in Chicago Reader[1]:
      When I ask why so much of the humor on National Public Radio is antiurban, Kessler responds with one of Ian Shoales's most quoted lines: "If the city were a nice place to live, nobody would want to live there.
    • 1996 September 6, Harold Henderson, “Up Against the Sprawl”, in Chicago Reader[2]:
      The District One headquarters of the Illinois Department of Transportation is about as antiurban as a building can get.

Translations

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