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Definition: Neighborhood |
NeighborhoodNoun1. A surrounding or nearby region; "the plane crashed in the vicinity of Asheville"; "it is a rugged locality"; "he always blames someone else in the immediate neighborhood". 2. People living near one another; "it is a friendly neighborhood"; "my neighborhood voted for Bush". 3. The approximate amount of something (usually used prepositionally as in `in the region of'); "it was going to take in the region of two or three months to finish the job"; "the price is in the neighborhood of $100". Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. |
Date "neighborhood" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1321. (references) |
Note: Neighborhood \Neigh"bor*hood\, noun. [Written also neighbourhood.]. (references) |
| Domain | Definition |
Tips from 1870 | Usage: Region, Neighborhood. Region is a broader and more comprehensive term, and should not be applied to the narrow limits of a neighborhood. Source: Slips of Speech. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
This article is about neighbourhoods in cities. See also Neighbourhood (topology).A neighbourhood (in American English, neighborhood) is a geographically localised community located within a larger city or suburb. The residents of a given neighbourhood are called neighbours (or neighbors), although this term may also be used across much larger distances in rural areas.
Traditionally, a neighbourhood is small enough that the neighbours are all able to know each other. However in practice, neighbours may not know one another very well at all. Villages aren't divided into neighbourhoods, because they are already small enough that the villagers can all know each other. The boroughs of New York City and Greater London are intermediate in size between the neighbourhoods that comprise them on the one hand and the entire city on the other.
In Canada and the United States (how about other countries?), neighbourhoods are often given official or semi-official status through neighbourhood associations, or Block watch in Canada. These may regulate such matters as lawn care and fence height, and they may provide such services as block parties, neighbourhood parks, and community security. In some other places the equivalent organisation is the parish, a parish may have several neighbourhoods within it depending on the area. .
Some well-known neighbourhoods include:
- Hyde Park in the city of Chicago;
- in London:
- Notting Hill in the borough of Kensington and Chelsea:
- in Westminster:
- Paddington
- Soho
- in Los Angeles:
- Hollywood
- South Central
- in New York City:
- in Manhattan:
- Greenwich Village
- Harlem
- SoHo
- Washington Heights
- Saint Albans in Queens
- Riverdale in The Bronx
- Montmartre in Paris
- in San Francisco:
- The Castro
- The Haight
- The Mission District
- Georgetown in Washington
- in Toronto:
- Yorkville
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Neighbourhood."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
This is a glossary of some terms used in the branch of mathematics known as topology. Although there is no clear distinction between different areas of topology, this glossary focuses primarily on general topology and definitions that are fundamental to a broad range of areas. See the article on topological spaces for basic definitions and examples, and see the article on topology for a brief history and description of the subject area.The following articles may also be useful. These either contain specialised vocabulary within general topology or provide more detailed expositions of the definitions given below. The list of general topology topics will also be very helpful.
All spaces in this glossary are assumed to be topological spaces unless stated otherwise.
- Compact space
- Connected space
- Continuity (topology)
- Metric space
- Separated sets
- Separation axiom
- Uniform space
Isotonicity: Every set is contained in its closure.
- Accessible. See T1.
- Baire space. A space X is a Baire space if it is not meagre in itself. Equivalently, X is a Baire space if the intersection of countably many dense open sets is dense.
- Base. A set of open sets is a base (or basis) for a topology if every open set in the topology is a union of sets in the base. The topology generated by a base is the smallest topology containing the base elements; this topology consists of all unions of elements of the base.
- Basis. See Base.
- Borel algebra. The Borel algebra on a space X is the smallest σ-algebra containing all the open sets.
- Borel set. A Borel set is an element of a Borel algebra.
- Boundary. The boundary of a set is the set's closure minus its interior. Equivalently, the boundary of a set is the intersection of its closure with the closure of its complement.
- Cauchy sequence. A sequence {xi} in a metric space M with metric d is called a Cauchy sequence (or Cauchy for short) if for every positive real number r, there is an integer N such that for all integers m and n greater than N, the distance d(xm, xn) is less than r.
- Clopen. A set is clopen if it is both open and closed.
- Closed set. A set is closed if its complement is a member of the topology.
- Closed function. A function from one space to another is closed if the image of every closed set is closed.
- Closure. The closure of a set is the intersection of all closed sets which contain it. It is the smallest closed set containing the original set.
- Compact. A space is compact if every open cover has a finite subcover. Compact spaces are always Lindelöf and paracompact. Compact Hausdorff spaces are therefore normal.
- Complete. A metric space is complete if every Cauchy sequence converges.
- Completely metrizable/completely metrisable. See Topologically complete.
- Completely normal. A space is completely normal if any two separated sets have disjoint neighbourhoods.
- Completely normal Hausdorff. A completely normal Hausdorff space (or T5 space) is a completely normal T1 space. (A completely normal space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T1, so the terminology is consistent.) Completely normal Hausdorff spaces are always normal Hausdorff.
- Completely regular. A space is completely regular if whenever C is a closed set and p is a point not in C, then C and {p} are functionally separated.
- Completely regular Hausdorff. See Tychonoff.
- Completely T3. See Tychonoff.
- Component. See connected component.
- Connected. A space X is connected if it is not the union of a pair of disjoint nonempty open sets. Equivalently, a space is connected if the only clopen sets are the whole space and the empty set.
- Connected component. A connected component of a space is a maximal connected subspace. The connected components of a space form a partition of that space.
- Continuous. A function from one space to another is continuous if the preimage of every open set is open.
- Contractible. A space X is contractible if the identity map on X is homotopic to a constant map. Contractible spaces are always simply connected.
- Countably compact. A space is countably compact if every countable open cover has a finite subcover.
- Cover. A collection {Ui} of sets is a cover (or covering), if their union is the whole space. An open cover is a cover consisting of open sets.
- Covering. See Cover.
- Dense. A dense set is a set that meets every nonempty open set in the space. Equivalently, a set is dense if its closure is the whole space.
- Discrete topology. See Discrete space.
- Discrete space. A space X is discrete if every set is open. We say that X carries the discrete topology.
- Entourage. See Uniform space.
- Fσ set. An Fσ set is a countable union of closed sets.
- First category. See Meagre.
- First-countable. A space is first-countable if every point has a countable local base.
- Functionally separated. Two sets A and B in a space X are functionally separated if there is a continuous function from X into the interval [0,1] with the property that A is mapped to 0 and B is mapped to 1.
- Gδ set. A Gδ set is a countable intersection of open sets.
- Hausdorff. A space is Hausdorff (or T2) if every two distinct points have disjoint neighbourhoods. Hausdorff spaces are always T1.
- Hereditary. A property of spaces is said to be hereditary if whenever a space has that property, then so does every subspace of it. For example, second-countability is a hereditary property.
- Homeomorphism. A homeomorphism from a space X to a space Y is a bijective map f : X → Y such that f and f -1 are continuous. The spaces X and Y are then said to be homeomorphic. From the standpoint of topology, homeomorphic spaces are identical.
- Homogeneous. A space X is homogeneous if for every x and y in X there is a homeomorphism f : X -> X such that f(x) = y. Intuitively speaking, this means that the space looks the same at every point. All topological groups are homogeneous.
- Homotopic maps. Two continuous maps f, g : X -> Y are homotopic if there is a continuous map H: X× [0,1] → Y, such that H(x,0) = f(x) and H(x,1) = g(x) for all x in X. Here, the space X × [0,1] is given the usual product topology. The function H is called a homotopy between f and g.
- Indiscrete space. See Trivial topology.
- Indiscrete topology. See Trivial topology.
- Interior. The interior of a set is the union of all open sets contained in it. It is the largest open set contained in the original set.
- Isolated point. A point x is an isolated point if the singleton {x} is open.
- Kolmogorov. See T0.
- Kuratowski closure axioms. The Kuratowski closure axioms are a set of axioms satisied by the closure operator:
Idempotence: The closure of the closure of a set is equal to the closure of that set. Preservation of binary unions: The closure of the union of two sets is the union of their closures. Preservation of nullary unions: The closure of the empty set is empty.
d(x, y) ≥ 0
- Limit point. A point x in X is a limit point of a subset S if every open set containing x also contains a point of S other than x itself. This is equivalent to requiring that every neighbourhood of x contains a point of S other than x itself.
- Lindelöf. A space is Lindelöf if every open cover has a countable subcover.
- Local base. A set B of neighbourhoods of a point x of a topological space X is a local base (or local basis, neighbourhood base, neighbourhood basis) at x if every neighbourhood of x contains some member of B.
- Local basis. See Local base.
- Locally compact. A space is locally compact if every point has a local base consisting of compact neighbourhoods. Locally compact Hausdorff spaces are always Tychonoff.
- Locally connected. A space is locally connected if every point has a local base consisting of connected sets.
- Locally finite. A collection of subsets of a space is locally finite if every point has a neighbourhood which meets only finitely many of the subsets.
- Locally metrizable/Locally metrisable. A space is locally metrizable if every point has a metrizable neighbourhood.
- Locally path-connected. A space is locally path-connected if every point has a local base consisting of path-connected sets. A locally path-connected space is connected if and only if it is path-connected.
- Meagre. If X is a space and A is a subset of X, then A is meagre in X (or of first category in X) if it is the countable union of nowhere dense sets. If A is not meagre in X, A is sometimes said to be of second category in X.
- Metric. See Metric space.
- Metric space. A metric space is a set M equipped with a function d : M × M → R satisfying the following conditions for all x, y, and z in M:
d(x, x) = 0 if d(x, y) = 0 then x = y (identity of indiscernibles) d(x, y) = d(y, x) (symmetry) d(x, z) ≤ d(x, y) + d(y, z) (triangle inequality) The function d is called a metric on M.
The empty set and X are in T.
- Metrizable/Metrisable. A space is metrizable if it is homeomorphic to a metric space. Metrizable spaces are always Hausdorff and paracompact (and hence normal and Tychonoff), and first-countable.
- Neighbourhood/Neighborhood. A neighbourhood of a set S is a set containing an open set which in turn contains the set S. (Note that the neighbourhood itself need not be open.) A neighbourhood of a point p is a neighbourhood of the singleton set {p}.
- Neighbourhood base. See Local base.
- Neighbourhood basis. See Local base.
- Net. A net in a space X is a map from a directed set A to X. A net from A to X is usually denoted (xα), where α is in an index variable ranging over A. Every sequence is a net, taking A to be the directed set of natural numbers with the usual ordering.
- Normal. A space is normal if any two disjoint closed sets have disjoint neighbourhoods. Normal spaces admit partitions of unity.
- Normal Hausdorff. A normal Hausdorff space (or T4 space) is a normal T1 space. (A normal space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T1, so the terminology is consistent.) Normal Hausdorff spaces are always Tychonoff.
- Nowhere dense. A nowhere dense set is a set whose closure has empty interior.
- Open cover. See Cover.
- Open set. A set is open if it is a member of the topology.
- Open function. A function from one space to another is open if the image of every open set is open.
- Paracompact. A space is paracompact if every open cover has an open locally finite refinement. Paracompact Hausdorff spaces are normal.
- Partition of unity. A partition of unity of a space X is a set of continuous functions from X to [0,1] such that any point has a neighbourhood where all but a finite number of the functions are identically zero, and the sum of all the functions on the entire space is identically 1.
- Path-connected. A space X is path-connected if for every two points x, y in X, there is a path p from x to y, i.e., a continuous map p: [0,1] → X with p(0) = x and p(1) = y. Path-connected spaces are always connected.
- Point. This term is often used to refer to elements of the topological space.
- Polish. A space is called Polish if it is metrizable with a separable and complete metric.
- Product topology. If {Xi} is a collection of spaces and X is the (set-theoretic) product of {Xi}, then the product topology on X is the weakest topology for which all the projection maps are continuous.
- Punctured neighbourhood/Punctured neighborhood. A punctured neighbourhood of a point p is a neighbourhood of p, minus {p}. For instance, the interval (-1,1) = {x : -1 < x < 1} is a neighbourhood of 0 in the real line, so the set (-1,0) ∪ (0,1) = (-1,1) - {0} is a punctured neighbourhood of 0.
- Quotient space. If X and Y are spaces and f : X → Y is any function, then the quotient space on Y induced by f is the weakest topology for which f is continuous. The most common example of this is to consider an equivalence relation on X, with Y the set of equivalence classes and f the natural projection map.
- Refinement. A cover K is a refinement of a cover L if every member of K is a subset of some member of L.
- Regular. A space is regular if whenever C is a closed set and p is a point not in C, then C and p have disjoint neighbourhoods.
- Regular Hausdorff. A space is regular Hausdorff (or T3) if it is a regular T0 space. (A regular space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T0, so the terminology is consistent.)
- Residual. If X is a space and A is a subset of X, then A is residual in X if the complement of A is meagre in X.
- Second category. See Meagre.
- Second-countable. A space is second-countable if it has a countable base for its topology. Second-countable spaces are always separable, first-countable and Lindelöf.
- Separable. A space is separable if it has a countable dense subset.
- Separated. Two sets A and B are separated if each is disjoint from the other's closure.
- Sierpinski space. Let S = {0,1}. Then T = is a topology on S, and the resulting space is called Sierpinski space. The Sierpinski space is the simplest example of a space that does not satisfy the T1 axiom.
- Simply connected. A space X is simply connected if it is path-connected and every continuous map f: S1 → X is homotopic to a constant map.
- Subbase. A set of open sets is a subbase (or subbasis) for a topology if every open set in the topology is a union of finite intersections of sets in the subbase. The topology generated by a subbase is the smallest topology containing the subbase elements; this topology consists of all finite intersections of unions of elements of the subbase.
- Subbasis. See Subbase.
- Subcover. A cover K is a subcover (or subcovering) of a cover L if every member of K is a member of L.
- Subcovering. See Subcover.
- Subspace. If X is a space and A is a subset of X, then the subspace topology on A induced by X consists of all intersections of open sets in X with A.
- T0. A space is T0 (or Kolmogorov) if for every pair of distinct points x and y in the space, either there is an open set containing x but not y, or there is an open set containing y but not x.
- T1. A space is T1 (or accessible) if for every pair of distinct points x and y in the space, there is an open set containing x but not y. (Compare with T0; here, we are allowed to specify which point will be contained in the open set.) Equivalently, a space is T1 if all its singletons are closed. T1 spaces are always T0.
- T2. See Hausdorff.
- T3. See Regular Hausdorff.
- T3½. See Tychonoff.
- T4. See Normal Hausdorff.
- T5. See Completely normal Hausdorff.
- Topological space. A topological space is a set X equipped with a collection T of subsets of X satisfying the following conditions:
The union of any collection of sets in T is also in T. The intersection of any pair of sets in T is also in T. The collection T is called a topology on X.
if U is in Φ, then U contains { (x, x) : x in X }.
- Topologically complete. A space is topologically complete if it is homeomorphic to a complete metric space.
- Topology. See Topological space.
- Totally disconnected. A space is totally disconnected if it has no connected subset with more than one point.
- Trivial topology. The trivial topology on a set X consists of precisely the empty set and the entire space X.
- Tychonoff. A Tychonoff space (or completely regular Hausdorff space, completely T3 space, T3½ space) is a completely regular T0 space. (A completely regular space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T0, so the terminology is consistent.) Tychonoff spaces are always regular Hausdorff.
- Uniform space. A uniform space is a set U equipped with a nonempty system Φ of subsets of the Cartesian product X × ''X'\' satisfying the following:
if U is in Φ, then { (y, x) : (x, y) in U } is also in Φ if U is in Φ and V is a subset of X × X which contains U, then V is in Φ if U and V are in Φ, then U ∩ V is in Φ if U is in Φ, then there exists V in Φ such that, whenever (x, y) and (y, z) are in V, then (x, z) is in U. The elements of Φ are called entourages, and Φ itself is called a uniform structure on U.
- Uniform structure. See Uniform space.
- Weak topology. The weak topology on a set, with respect to a collection of functions from that set into topological spaces, is the weakest topology on the set which makes all the functions continuous.
- Weakly hereditary. A property of spaces is said to be weakly hereditary if whenever a space has that property, then so does every closed subspace of it. For example, compactness and the Lindelöf property are both weakly hereditary properties, although neither is hereditary.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Topology glossary."
Synonyms: NeighborhoodSynonyms: locality (n), neighbourhood (n), region (n), vicinity (n). (additional references) |
| Context | Synonyms within Context (source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus). |
Circumjacence | Outpost; border; (edge); girdle; (circumference); outskirts, boulebards, suburbs, purlieus, precincts, faubourgs, environs, entourage, banlieue; neighborhood, vicinage, vicinity. |
Nearness | Purlieus, neighborhood, vicinage, environs, alentours, suburbs, confines, banlieue, borderland; whereabouts. |
Noun: nearness; Adjective: proximity, propinquity; vicinity, vicinage; neighborhood, adjacency; contiguity. | |
| Source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus. | |
| Domain | Usage | |
Screenplays | My name is Lester Burnham , this is my neighborhood, this is my street , this is my life (American Beauty; writing credit: Alan Ball) This neighborhood is more important than money (The Brady Bunch Movie; writing credit: Betty Thomas, written by Laurice Elehwany, Rick Copp, Bonnie Turner and Terry Turner) I was just nowhere near your neighborhood. (Singles; writing credit: Cameron Crowe) There's serious metal fatigue in all the load-bearing members, the wiring is substandard, it's completely inadequate for our power needs, and the neighborhood is like a demilitarized zone (Ghostbusters; writing credit: Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis.) You're in the neighborhood. (Saved by the Bell; writing credit: Ana Maria Moretzsohn) | |
Lyrics | A house, a yard, a neighborhood (One Voice; performing artist: Billy Gilman) You're getting a bad reputation in your neighborhood (You're Only Human (Second Wind); performing artist: Billy Joel) He shouted numbers and neighborhood streets (Looking For A Place To Land; performing artist: Dakota Moon) Another summer in the neighborhood (AM Radio; performing artist: Everclear) To all the cuties in the neighborhood (Around the Way Girl; performing artist: L.L. Cool J) | |
Movie/TV Titles | Montréal: The Neighborhood Revived (1974) MisteRogers Neighborhood (1967) Let's Be Good Citizens in Our Neighborhood (1954) Neighborhood House (1936) A Healthy Neighborhood (1913) | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | ||
| Domain | Title | ||
Books | |||
Periodicals |
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Theater & Movies |
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Music |
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High Tech |
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Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Thumbnail | Description & Credit | Thumbnail | Description & Credit |
Probing deep within a neighborhood stellar nursery, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope uncovered a ... Credit: NASA. | ![]() | Local community neighborhood leaders, discuss plans for Ralston Creek Renovation Area in Iowa City, IA, with Stan Simmons, a technician for Environmental Tech Action, a consulting firm that contracts with the local RC&D. Simmons also volunteers his time. Credit: Tim McCabe. | |
![]() | Hal Pyle, NRCS district conservationist, and conservation partner check samples from a water monitoring project in a neighborhood located in Springfield, Illinois. The project is sponsored by several federal, state and county agencies. The system is monit. Credit: Bob Nichols. | ![]() | Royal Oak, Mich. Portrait of 3 children in the neighborhood of Father Coughlin's Shrine of the Little Flower P. Credit: National Library of Medicine; photo by Arthur Siegel.. |
![]() | Neighborhood news. Credit: Library of Congress. | ![]() | San Francisco, Calif. Apr. 1942. A dry goods store closing out its merchandise shortly before the evacuation of persons of Japanese ancestry from the Post and Buchanan streets neighborhood of San Francisco. Credit: Library of Congress. |
![]() | Vice president, Philadelphia branch, George B. Morris, explains NAACP program at neighborhood meeting held in north Philadelphia / Smith's Photo Service, Philadelphia, Pa. Credit: Library of Congress. | ![]() | Carriage in residential street, historic neighborhood. Credit: Library of Congress. |
![]() | Italian neighborhood with street market, Mulberry Street, New York. Credit: Library of Congress. | ![]() | View from the 2nd story of the residence of Mrs. Comre. John Rodgers, Franklin Row, K Street at 12 & 13 Sts, Washington, D.C., overlooking the backyard and adjacent neighborhood, and showing children standing on balconies. Credit: Library of Congress. |
Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits. | |||
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| "Poor neighborhood 3" by Gilbert Tremblay Commentary: "Some building I took a pict of in old quebec. ." | "Clouds" by Kelli Commentary: "It was a nice day in the neighborhood." |
Source: photographs selected by the editor, with permission from the photographers. | |
| Author | Quotation |
Hesiod | Try to take for a mate a person of your own neighborhood. |
John Henry | A university does great things, but there is one thing it does not do; it does not intellectualize its neighborhood. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | |
| Author | Date | Quotation |
Magna Carta | 1215 | A freeman shall not be amerced for a slight offense, except in accordance with the degree of the offense; and for a grave offense he shall be amerced in accordance with the gravity of the offense, yet saving always his "contentment"; and a merchant in the same way, saving his "merchandise"; and a villein shall be amerced in the same way, saving his "wainage" if they have fallen into our mercy: and none of the aforesaid amercements shall be imposed except by the oath of honest men of the neighborhood. (reference) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Title | Author | Quote |
Walden | Thoreau, Henry David | It is well to have some water in your neighborhood, to give buoyancy to and float the earth |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Subject | Topic | Quote |
Health | Call your local animal control agency to remove any stray animals from your neighborhood. (references) | |
All aspects of a child's environment - home, school, neighborhood - help to determine whether the child will try drugs. (references) | ||
For instance, certain other substances in the neighborhood of beta amyloid protein may normally bind to it and thus keep it in solution. (references) | ||
Business | A large Coto store in the same neighborhood devotes 18 meters of similarly arranged aisle space, with imported frozen vegetables. (references) | |
The companies are concentrated in or in the neighborhood of Rotterdam, which is the major Dutch seaport and the busiest port in the world. (references) | ||
Middle-income groups are the major discount store customers in Korea while lower-income groups generally buy staple goods in small neighborhood shops or general markets. (references) | ||
Children | Panama | Police arrested and detained children for minor infractions during neighborhood sweeps. (references) |
Bulgaria | In September 2000, approximately 300 Romani children from the Nov Put Romani neighborhood were bused to one of seven mixed regular schools in the town of Vidin. (references) | |
Mexico | Nine years of education are compulsory, and parents are legally liable for their children's attendance; however, SEP and the Sierra Neighborhood Foundation have maintained that only approximately 30 percent of youths between 15 and 20 years of age attend school. (references) | |
Civil Liberties | Greece | Neighborhood schools offered no alternative supervision for the children during the period of religious instruction. (references) |
Congo | Groups of citizens implemented neighborhood watch programs, but women in some parts of Kinshasa and Lubumbashi did not leave their homes at night due to fear of attack. (references) | |
Pakistan | On January 11, seven Christian evangelists and their pastor were arrested for distributing religious literature and showing a film entitled "Who Is Jesus?" in a largely Christian neighborhood in Jacobabad. (references) | |
Economic History | France | A small neighborhood store chain offers U.S. suppliers entry into the French market. (references) |
South Africa | Private sector arrears, though hard to pin down, are likely in the neighborhood of U.S. $500 million, for a total arrearage of nearly U.S. $1.2 billion. (references) | |
Vietnam | The logistical barriers to direct marketing include the lack of consumer data, neighborhood profiles, a scarcity of mailing lists, and limited private telephone ownership. (references) | |
Human Rights | Dominican Republic | His neighborhood, the El Capotillo barrio, extensively protested the shooting. (references) |
United Kingdom | In July and August two car bombs were detonated in the west London Ealing neighborhood. (references) | |
Macedonia | On August 7, police killed five NLA members in a house in an ethnic-Albanian neighborhood of Skopje. (references) | |
Minorities | Ethiopia | Church leaders asked that the construction stop, and when the Muslims refused, church leaders called upon neighborhood Christians to pray in front of the site. (references) |
Kenya | A number of incidents took place in November and December 2000, when a land dispute led to violence between Muslims and Christians in a densely populated neighborhood in Nairobi. (references) | |
Poland | This was similar to the attack on the same center in 2000, which is reportedly located in an unsafe neighborhood; a second center in Krakow has not been the target of such attacks. (references) | |
Political Economy | Sudan | The Popular Police Force (PFP), which was made up of nominees from neighborhood popular committees for surveillance and services to enforce Shari'a laws, was disbanded in 2000. Members of the security forces committed numerous, serious human rights abuses. (references) |
Political Rights | Chad | That same day, attackers injured and threatened with death another FAR supporter in a different neighborhood; the attackers shredded his party flag. (references) |
Travel | Nicaragua | However, the cost varies greatly depending on the quality of construction and location of the neighborhood. (references) |
Women | Chile | Police habitually round up prostitutes (usually as a result of complaints by residents of the neighborhood) and accuse them of "offenses against morality" which can lead to a $75 (50,000 pesos) fine or 5 days in prison. (references) |
Worker Rights | Macau | Unions tend to resemble local traditional neighborhood associations, promoting social and cultural activities rather than issues relating to the workplace. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits. | ||
| Speaker | Phrase(s) |
Bob Woodward | To the United States. To, as he kept saying, the neighborhood in the Middle East. And, to a certain extent, to everyone. And they've been working on this a year. The problem in North Korea at least came to a head, really, in the last four, five months. |
Dennis Miller | For every guy from a poor neighborhood who grows up into a criminal, there are a thousand who work hard and build a decent life for themselves. |
Gloria Allred | It's really hard for her, to, to have the live in the same neighborhood that the house exists as Mr. Westerfield was living in. |
Martin Scorsese | Tough neighborhood but it was a working class, working class, but it was right off the bowery too, you know. |
Nancy Grace | That's right, Sally. He was the only one in the entire neighborhood that took a powder. As soon as this child went missing, when they went to Westerfield's home immediately after she was discovered gone, Westerfield was gone. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| Speaker | Term | Phrase(s) |
George Washington | 1789-1797 | To enable, by competent rewards, the employment of qualified and trusty persons to reside among them as agents would also contribute to the preservation of peace and good neighborhood. |
Jimmy Carter | 1977-1981 | Neighborhood based organizations are the threshold of the American community. |
Ronald Reagan | 1981-1989 | Excellence must begin in our homes and neighborhood schools, where it's the responsibility of every parent and teacher and the right of every child. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| "Neighborhood" is generally used as a noun (common) -- approximately 92.31% of the time. "Neighborhood" is used about 13 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted) |
| Parts of Speech | Percent | Usage per 100 Million Words | Rank in English |
| Noun (common) | 92.31% | 12 | 101,599 |
| Noun (proper) | 7.69% | 1 | 339,140 |
| Total | 100.00% | 13 | N/A |
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.
Expressions using "neighborhood": Common because of neighborhood ♦ good neighborhood ♦ in the neighborhood of ♦ vicinage or neighborhood. Additional references. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. |
| The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com. |
| Language | Translations for "neighborhood"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses. | |
Albanian | zonë e afërt (neighbourhood), marrëdhënie fqinjësie (neighbourhood), mëhallë (neighbourhood, Vicinage), lagje (neighbor, neighbour, neighbourhood, quarter, section, Square, Vicinage, ward), fqinjët (neighbourhood), fqinjëri (neighborship, neighbourhood, neighbourship). (various references) | |
Arabic | مقدار تقريبي (neighbourhood), مجاورة (neighbourhood), حي (active, alive, animate, animated, block, district, existent, graphic, graphical, lifelike, live, lively, living, neighbourhood, nod, part, pictorial, picturesque, quarter, reanimate, recall, regenerate, section, vivid, ward), جوار (nearness, neighbourhood, proximity, vicinity). (various references) | |
Asturian | vecindariu. (various references) | |
Bemba | icitente. (various references) | |
Bulgarian | съседство (adjacency, nearness, neighborship, neighbourhood, neighbourship, proximity), съседи (neighbourhood), съкварталци (neighbourhood), квартал (borough, neighbourhood, quarter, section, ward), околности (environs, neighbourhood, precincts, purlieus, surroundings, vicinity), махала (neighbourhood), близост (adjacency, alliance, appetence, appetency, approach, association, closeness, immediacy, impendence, nearness, neighbourhood, propinquity, proximity, reach, vicinity), добросъседски отношения (neighbourhood). (various references) | |
Cebuano | kasilinganan. (various references) | |
Chamorro | bisinu (neighbor). (various references) | |
Chinese | 里 (caldron, Chinese mile, kettle), 邻里 (neighbourhood), 街坊 . (various references) | |
Czech | sousedství (neighbourhood, Vicinage, vicinity), okolí (entourage, environs, neighbourhood, outskirts, precincts, surroundings, Vicinage, vicinity), blízkost (closeness, nearness, neighbourhood, propinquity, proximity, vicinity). (various references) | |
Danish | nabolaget (the neighborhood). (various references) | |
Dutch | nabuurschap (neighbourhood). (various references) | |
Esperanto | najbareco (neighbourhood). (various references) | |
Estonian | ümbruskonnas. (various references) | |
Faeroese | grannalag. (various references) | |
Farsi | مجاورت (Adjacency, Contiguity, Juxtaposition, Propinquity, Proximity, Vicinity), همسایگی (Vicinity), اهل محل . (various references) | |
French | quartier (neighbourhood). (various references) | |
Frisian | omkriten. (various references) | |
German | nachbarschaft (neighbors, neighborship, neighbourhood, neighbours, neighbourship, proximity, vicinity). (various references) | |
Greek | συνοικία (district, neighbourhood, quarter), γειτονιά (neighbourhood, vicinity). (various references) | |
Hebrew | שכונה (neighbourhood, quarter, residential quarter), שכנות (neighbourhood, vicinity). (various references) | |
Hungarian | szomszédság (adjacent, neighborship, neighbourhood, neighbourship, proximity, Vicinage, vicinity). (various references) | |
Indonesian | lingkungan (environment). (various references) | |
Inuktitut | nunaqatiit. (various references) | |
Italian | vicinanza (adjacency, closeness, nearness, neighbourhood, outskirts, propinquity, proximity, vicinity). (various references) | |
Japanese Kanji | 附近 , 隣近所 (neighbors), 近回り (taking a shortcut), 近傍 , 界隈 , 当たり (hit, per ..., reaching the mark, success, vicinity), 当り (hit, per ..., reaching the mark, success, vicinity). (various references) | |
Japanese Katakana | きんぼう, ふきん (axe, dish cloth, environs, neighbourhood, tea-towel, vicinity), かいわい, あたり (hit, nearby, neighbourhood, per ..., reaching the mark, success, vicinity), となりきんじょ (neighbors), ちかまわり (taking a shortcut). (various references) | |
Kongo | kikundi. (various references) | |
Korean | 인근 (neighbourhood). (various references) | |
Macedonian | sosedstvo. (various references) | |
Maya | baandah. (various references) | |
Papago | kihthag. (various references) | |
Pig Latin | eighborhoodnay.(various references) | |
Portuguese | vizinhança (neighborship, neighbourhood, neighbourship, propinquity, proximity, vicinage, vicinity, way), bairro (burgh, neighbourhood, quarter). (various references) | |
Portuguese Brazilian | bairro. (various references) | |
Provencal | vesinatge. (various references) | |
Romanian | zonã (area, belt, country, digging, district, neighbourhood, parish, patch, province, sector, space, surface, zone), vecini (kith, neighbourhood), vecinãtate (adjacency, closeness, limitation, nearness, neighbourhood, vicinity), relaţii între vecini (neighbourhood), regiune (belt, country, demesne, field, limit, neighbourhood, pale, parish, part, place, province, region, zone), preajmã (adjacency, neighbourhood, precinct, purlieu, vicinity), parte (aspect, corner, district, flank, fragment, hand, joint, lot, movement, neighbourhood, part, Parthian, partition, party, passus, piece, proportion, region, sect, section, segment, share, side, snack, whack, zone), district (area, district, hundred, neighbourhood, pale, region), cartier (district, neighbourhood, section, slum, vicinity, ward), bunã vecinãtate (neighborliness, neighbourhood, neighbourliness), apropiere (approach, approximation, closeness, coming, kindred, nearness, neighbor, neighbour, neighbourhood, propinquity, proximity, vicinity). (various references) | |
Romany |