释义 |
Definition of city centre in English: city centre(US city center) noun The central part or main business and commercial area of a city. a new metro station provides a direct link to the city centre Example sentencesExamples - Cycle rickshaws are usually banned from the city centre of Delhi, an area of big hotels, shops, government buildings and cars.
- As my taxi halted at a red light in the darkened, deserted city centre one night, I feared my own story was about to veer towards pessimistic.
- The congestion charge keeps cars, and therefore theatregoers, out of the city centre until too late in the evening.
- Most people can't afford a £60 night out in the city centre but will do £20 locally.
- She left her home on Friday night to catch a bus to the city centre.
- He grew up living in Fitzwilliam Square in the city centre.
- Filming took a full day, and was completed in and around the city centre.
- He's always lived in the city centre.
- Municipal officials said further showers risked flooding the city centre, escalating the crisis faced by the country.
- Out of the destruction and the rubble arose a new plan to revitalize the city centre.
- If I go out in Dublin, I arrange to meet some friends and we get the bus to the city centre.
- Adelaide is a small city with a very obvious pride in its origins and in their physical expression in the form and setting of the city centre.
- In 1930, the museum abandoned a Georgian-style building to commission a new building on a site close to the city centre.
- Though close to the city centre, it serves a relatively poor area, hemmed in by dense, dingy apartment blocks.
- During the 1960s, the university decamped to a suburban greenfield site at Belfield, to the south of the city centre.
- The couple live an hour's drive from the city centre.
- Vancouver is in the midst of a new housing rush in the city centre.
- The new building lies in a slightly scruffy district to the north of the city centre.
- Oslo has a very precise and beautiful city centre dating from the early nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- Out of the nearly five million inhabitants, 17 per cent live in the city centre.
Definition of city center in US English: city center(British city centre) noun The central part or main business and commercial area of a city. we took a bus back to the city center Example sentencesExamples - Vancouver is in the midst of a new housing rush in the city centre.
- He grew up living in Fitzwilliam Square in the city centre.
- Cycle rickshaws are usually banned from the city centre of Delhi, an area of big hotels, shops, government buildings and cars.
- Adelaide is a small city with a very obvious pride in its origins and in their physical expression in the form and setting of the city centre.
- If I go out in Dublin, I arrange to meet some friends and we get the bus to the city centre.
- She left her home on Friday night to catch a bus to the city centre.
- Out of the nearly five million inhabitants, 17 per cent live in the city centre.
- Oslo has a very precise and beautiful city centre dating from the early nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- Filming took a full day, and was completed in and around the city centre.
- In 1930, the museum abandoned a Georgian-style building to commission a new building on a site close to the city centre.
- The new building lies in a slightly scruffy district to the north of the city centre.
- Most people can't afford a £60 night out in the city centre but will do £20 locally.
- The congestion charge keeps cars, and therefore theatregoers, out of the city centre until too late in the evening.
- He's always lived in the city centre.
- Though close to the city centre, it serves a relatively poor area, hemmed in by dense, dingy apartment blocks.
- As my taxi halted at a red light in the darkened, deserted city centre one night, I feared my own story was about to veer towards pessimistic.
- The couple live an hour's drive from the city centre.
- Municipal officials said further showers risked flooding the city centre, escalating the crisis faced by the country.
- During the 1960s, the university decamped to a suburban greenfield site at Belfield, to the south of the city centre.
- Out of the destruction and the rubble arose a new plan to revitalize the city centre.
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