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  1. Nov 3, 2022 · The phrase, "in town", however, functions as an adverb, roughly means "here, in the local area". Merriam-Webster describes it simply as "in this town", but it can be any place, not necessarily a town. Drew's in town this weekend. This means Drew, who presumably doesn't live locally, is here, in this city/town/village/etc., this weekend.

  2. Jun 10, 2017 · The thing is, the event is held in a coffee bar, so it is not really on the streets :) I just wanted to emphasize that it is not held in the class, but in town. I got a complaint that one can never say in the town because in town is an idiomatic expression. But I called it "in the town" on purpose. Now I am in doubt. –

  3. Mar 7, 2022 · I live in a town called Smallville. There are five major towns in my county. As an uncountable noun, meaning "land with houses, in contrast to countryside" Do you prefer life in town or on a farm? It also has a sense which is grammatically uncountable, meaning "This town" or "the local major town". In this sense it is like a proper noun.

  4. Jul 10, 2019 · 1. He moved across town and he moved across the town can both be valid sentences, but they do not mean the same thing. Town is a very old word and has numerous different uses, some which are countable, and some which are not. When used without an article, town usually refers to the population center where one is located, or which is nearest.

  5. Nov 2, 2015 · Back to your original question about on vs. in our town: Yes, if you describe something you do at a certain place, it would be in a town. On a town evokes a sense of "coming from above"- it rains on a town (or any other random object). You are right. "on our own" makes much more sense. Thanks for your answer.

  6. Aug 13, 2021 · As a speaker of US English, I would not use "best in town" for anything that is not literally "in town". It is not idiomatic for "the best that there is". More idiomatic would be saying that they are " (the) best in (their) class" or that they are "the best around". Share. Improve this answer. answered Aug 13, 2021 at 3:20. stangdon. 41k 9 72 101.

  7. Oct 9, 2022 · As for using "town" about cities, I was thinking more of the fact that dictionaries explain the meaning of "city" in terms of "large town", which to me indicates that "town" would be a hypernym of "town" and "city" in much the same way as "dog" is a hypernym of "dog" and "bitch", but I guess I've drawn the wrong conclusion here. –

  8. Jul 22, 2017 · However, many towns only have a "downtown", which is basically the business district of the town and generally doesn't have anything to do with the cardinal directions (traditionally, such districts are centrally located). In fact, Cambridge Dictionary's American definition of downtown specifically references the "central part of a city".

  9. Both versions (with or without there) are perfectly normal things to ask.But if it is included, only the precise context (i.e. - what was said previously, who you're talking to, etc.) can tell us whether there refers to the location of the party, or the event itself.

  10. Jun 13, 2020 · I am leaving town is an expression. It means that you are going away. The assumption is that you are leaving either the town where you live or the town where you are staying. But this is not explicit. We don't know what town it is. Adding for a few days makes the period clear. Without a time reference, the suggestion is that you are moving away.

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