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Looking for synonyms for "village"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(n)
A small (generally rural) town.
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A community of people living together, such as a hamlet, village, town, or city; a populated place.
A small village or a group of houses.
A neighborhood of New York City, New York, United States.
(US, Canada) A subdivision of a county.
A person who lives in, or comes from, a village.
A large settlement, bigger than a town; sometimes with a specific legal definition, depending on the place.
An individual’s place of birth, childhood home, or place of main residence.
A town having a municipal corporation and certain traditional rights.
An area located outside of towns and cities; an area that is not urban or suburban; a rural area.
(adj)
Relating to the countryside or to agriculture.
The territory of a nation; a sovereign state or a region once independent and still distinct in institutions, language, etc.
The people living within a political or geographical boundary.
A house, often larger and more expensive than average, in the countryside or on the coast, often used as a retreat.
British standard spelling of neighborhood.
(physical) An area; somewhere within an area.
A person who lives in or near a given place.
A small community, often rural, whose members share in the ownership of property, and in the division of labour; the members of such a community.
The residential area near one's home.
A district with a government that typically encloses no other governed districts; a borough, city, or incorporated town or village.
(countable, collective) Persons forming or belonging to a particular group, such as a nation, class, ethnic group, country, family, etc.
(finance) A financial instrument issued by a municipality.
State of being collected in a mass; a mass; cluster.
A design or image that has been influenced by indigenous peoples; especially such a tattoo.
(countable) A group sharing common characteristics, such as the same language, law, religion, or tradition.
Shared by a community; public.
The collective property and liabilities of someone, especially a deceased person.
An area or district considered as the site of certain activities; a neighbourhood.
A particular point or place in physical space.
(anthropology) A group of people all descended from a common ancestor, in fact or belief, especially when the exact genealogies are not known.
Level of saturation (especially of oxygen in the blood).
A traditional Chinese unit of length, originally the width of a person's thumb at the knuckle.
An unfilled space in something solid; a cavity, natural or artificial.
(uncountable) Initialism of educational television.
(often italicized) The burakumin, a Japanese minority group descended from feudal outcast communities
A transport service (such as a bus or train) that goes back and forth between two or more places.
(inorganic chemistry) The compound water.
A member of an ethnic group living mostly in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in southern China.
A man who is insane or mentally disturbed.
(sports) Pertaining to the Paralympic Games.
Burgundy wine.
A community in Spain or Spanish America, especially one of Pueblo Indians living in a stone or adobe multi-storey building.
The smallest local government unit in the Philippines, a subdivision of a city or municipality.
a village
A town on the south bank of the River Thames in south-east Greater London, England, through which the prime meridian passes (OS grid ref TQ3877).
A number of places in the United Kingdom:
A surname.
(N)
Communities: Life in Cooperative Culture is a quarterly magazine published by the Global Ecovillage Network - United States.
a series of five science fiction first-person shooter video games released between 1998 and 2024.
(rare) A town or village.
the people living in a municipality smaller than a city
A small town
(Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism, Lutheranism, Eastern Orthodoxy) An administrative part of a diocese that has its own church.
Dated spelling of kampung.
(now chiefly South Africa) A village or small town; a town considered provincial.
(historical) The smallest administrative unit of land in feudal England, corresponding to the Anglo-Saxon tithing and the modern parish.
A large grazing farm where horses and cattle are raised; distinguished from hacienda, a cultivated farm or plantation.
An enclosure for livestock.
A municipality or subdivision of a municipality in Spanish America, and in Spain itself.
(archaic, now chiefly in placenames) A group of houses standing together in the country; a hamlet; a village.
An administrative division of an area.
A small house.
The area surrounding a city or town; suburb.
A structure built or serving as an abode of human beings.
The peak or crest of a hill.
An elongated depression cast between hills or mountains, often with a river flowing through it.
A residence for monks or others who have taken religious vows.
A house (usually the main house) on a farm; thus:
(countable) A place where agricultural and similar activities take place, especially the growing of crops or the raising of livestock.
A political, cultural or social entity or part thereof that is completely surrounded by another.
A community in Digby County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
A restaurant or bar.
Moderately rural; transcending both urbanity and province; developing
A private house offering accommodation to paying guests; a boarding house; a bed and breakfast.
A small, simple one-storey dwelling or shelter, often with just one room, and generally built of readily available local materials.
The side of a hill.
Alternative form of manor house. [(UK) The main house on a landed estate.]
(South Asia, chiefly India) A village council or local government.
A more remote part of a town or city; the periphery, environs; a suburb.
(British spelling) Alternative spelling of neighboring. [(American spelling) Situated or living nearby or adjacent to.]
Resembling or worthy of a picture or painting; having the qualities of a picture or painting; pleasingly beautiful.
A surname transferred from the given name.
Adjacent, near, close by.
Someone or thing who lives in a place.
Alternative form of mahallah. [(chiefly South Asia) A subdivision or neighborhood.]
An elevated landmass smaller than a mountain.