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  1. Mar 19, 2019 · 1. There is precisely one time when you capitalize the word 'city' - when it is actually part of a proper name, for example the name of the city itself or some entity related to the city. So you can write "Manchester City" (either the municipality or the football team), because that is the name. But generally you should use lowercase when ...

  2. New York City is a vague virtual identity, meaning what it needs to mean to a particular writer. The "City" qualifier being a filler so it rolls off the tongue easier. Everyone knows New York is a city or else you can disambiguate in lowercase. It changes to uppercase when you have proper nouns like "New York City Council".

  3. Jul 7, 2015 · in academic writing, I always note that 'inter-city' and 'intercity' also appear in a same paper in different context. I was wondering whether the two style have any differences? thanks very much. such as The resulting inter-city matrices, inter-city links ;worldwide inter-city relations

  4. Apr 25, 2015 · Unless "city" is part of the name (i.e. "Carson City" or "New York City"), it's not capitalized after the city's name. Even used before (as in "City of"), the capitalization only happens if the title of the city in question actually has that name ("City of London", "City of New York"). Share. Improve this answer.

  5. May 26, 2011 · 10. Sometimes, "street address" refers to your physical location at a finer level than city. E.g., "1313 Mockingbird Lane", without the city name attached. But yes, usually it's just a retronym to distinguish it from mailing address (originally) and now e-mail address, web address, IP address, and so forth. Share.

  6. Jan 31, 2023 · Wikipedia has this List of tallest buildings in Hong Kong. Hong Kong has over 9,000 high-rise buildings, of which over 4,000 are skyscrapers standing taller than 100 m (328 ft) with 517 buildings above 150 m (492 ft). and The Guardian has Get some perspective: Hong Kong high-rises – in pictures. [with pictures] Share.

  7. Mar 28, 2014 · The popular usage of citizen (a person who lives in a particular town or city, originally a concatenation of the word city and denizen, cit (y)- (den)izen => cit-izen => citizen) actually makes citizen mean the same as national (someone who officially belongs to a particular country). This does not however, alter the original meaning of the ...

  8. If you mean both in the sense of anticipating something, both are equally valid. However 'I look forward' is more formal; it's the kind of thing you would write in an official letter.

  9. The city center is filled with restaurants and food steals where you can pick up a cheap and filling meal for every little money. The most well-known dish is the Chongqing hotpot, which is a pot of boiling broth that you put various uncooked food items into and the meal always takes a long time.

  10. The second quotation is from Jasper Maine, The City-Match (1639): Quartfield [a captain]. Why, you mungrel, / You John of all Trades, have we been your guests / Since you first kept a tavern ; when you had / The face and impudence to hang a bush / Out to three pints of claret, two of sack, / In all the World?

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