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  1. Dictionary
    home·town
    /ˈhōmˌtoun/

    noun

    • 1. the town of one's birth or early life or of one's present fixed residence.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Nov 22, 2019 · 9. Generally speaking "hometown" tends to refer to the place you were born and raised in rather than where you currently live; however that may depend on where you are geographically at the time you say it! If you were at university in London and you said "my hometown is Liverpool", it would be understood that you normally live in Liverpool but ...

  3. 3. Hometown as a noun is American English. Home town (n.) is British English. Since it's a two-word phrase in British English, it would need to be converted into a compound adjective by using a hyphen, rather than combining them into one word: "My home-town memories" rather than " hometown memories". In American English, "hometown" is also the ...

  4. Nov 25, 2021 · Preposition "at" vs "in", which is correct, "I am at my house" or "I am in my house"?

  5. Jul 14, 2021 · The meaning is similar to saying someone is a "buddy", but the actual nature of the relationship can vary from person to person. Dicaprio doesn't literally mean that Winslet is from his home town (he is from California and she is from England) so his meaning is clearly that she is a "close friend". Meanwhile, someone else might use "homie" to ...

  6. For example, if my parents raised me in Texas but I now live in Ottowa, I might say that my hometown is Dallas but my (current) local area is the Toronto metropolitan region. I think your local area refers to where you are living now – not necessarily the city limits, but any place around there you could reach in 30 minutes by car.

  7. Google, Merriam-webster, and other popular online dictionaries suggest it's used to imply someone is living far away in the context of fleeing/escaping because of fear/other reasons. However, Jacob and Sasha are not necessarily running away from their hometown. An answer from this question suggests suitcase student, but Sasha is not a student ...

  8. Apr 30, 2017 · I see a deeper meaning. I see it in light of relationships. "Give a man a fire and he's warm for the day." I see giving fire as giving someone a pat on the back or praise. They spend the rest of that day happy about their achievement and that they pleased someone else, but the feeling doesn't last that long.

  9. Jan 9, 2019 · In America, it's common to say "family commitments", "family matters", or "personal reasons". I think the phrase "family affairs" is out-dated -- I've encountered it in older books and TV shows (there was a TV show when I was a kid about a widower raising two children called "Family Affair"), but I don't recall hearing anyone use it lately.

  10. Jan 29, 2018 · The first and third ask what is the name of the hometown. The second asks for the location of the hometown. So which is correct depends on what kind of answer you want. All three are grammatically correct. The meaning of 2 is different; it asks for the location rather than the name of the hometown. Native speakers would almost always prefer 1 ...

  11. It's tempting to take the position that there are absolute interpretations to all utterances. However I'm inclined to see interpretation as a fluid process, where the interpretation of a question asked or answered takes on a rhetorical trajectory whereby the asker and respondent act and react in accordance with their interests at any given point in the interaction.

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