Urban

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google

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early 17th century: from Latin urbanus, from urbs, urb- ‘city’.


Ety img urban.png

wiktionary

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From Middle French urbain, from Latin urbanus, from urbs(“city”). Doublet of urbane.


etymonline

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urban (adj.)

"characteristic of city life, pertaining to cities or towns," 1610s (but rare before 1830s), from Latin urbanus "of or pertaining to a city or city life; in Rome," also "in city fashion, polished, refined, cultivated, courteous," but also sometimes "witty, facetious, bold, impudent;" as a noun, "city dweller," from urbs (genitive urbis) "city, walled town," a word of unknown origin.

The word gradually emerged in this sense as urbane became restricted to manners and styles of expression. In late 20c. American English gradually acquiring a suggestion of "African-American." Urban renewal, euphemistic for "slum clearance," is attested from 1955, American English. Urban sprawl recorded by 1958. Urban legend attested by 1980.




Urban

masc. proper name, from Latin urbanus "refined, courteous," literally "of a city" (see urban (adj.)).