district
noun /ˈdɪstrɪkt/
  /ˈdɪstrɪkt/
- an area of a country or town, especially one that has particular features- the City of London’s financial district
- Every city has its central business district.
- The house is in a historic district.
- Milan's most fashionable shopping district
- a poor district of the city
- rural/urban districts
 Extra ExamplesTopics Geographyb2, Buildingsb2- The apartment is approximately fifteen minutes from the downtown district.
- The hotel is located within Beijing's business district.
- Times Square is the entertainment district of New York.
- a new railway station to help people commuting from outlying districts
- efforts to create a single business district in downtown Beijing
- the shacks in the poorest districts of the city
- The financial district of London is usually referred to as ‘the City’.
- The house was like all the others in this exclusive residential district.
 Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- neighbouring/neighboring
- surrounding
- central
- …
 - create
- draw
- redraw
- …
 - stretch
- include something
- offer something
- …
 - authority
- council
- attorney
- …
 - in a/the district
- within a/the district
 
- one of the areas that a country, town or state is divided into for purposes of organization, with official boundaries (= borders)- a tax/postal district
- a village in the Darjeeling district
- a district judge
- the district health authority
 Extra ExamplesTopics Geographyb2- Delivery is free within the London postal district.
- a federal district court in New York
- They redrew districts to make sure Republican candidates would win.
- The hospital is only responsible for patients within its own district.
- Redrawing district boundaries would change the election results.
- It's a heavily Democratic district.
- He represented his district in Congress.
- He hasn't yet registered to vote in his home district.
- He has been transferred to a hospital in a different health district.
- Clinton barely won the district in 1996.
- Fire crews from all the surrounding districts helped to fight the fires in the city.
- The district includes much of the Ribault River.
- Their district stretches nearly 150 miles, from the mountains to the sea.
- The district council granted planning permission for ten new houses.
 Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- neighbouring/neighboring
- surrounding
- central
- …
 - create
- draw
- redraw
- …
 - stretch
- include something
- offer something
- …
 - authority
- council
- attorney
- …
 - in a/the district
- within a/the district
 
Word Originearly 17th cent. (denoting the territory under the jurisdiction of a feudal lord): from French, from medieval Latin districtus ‘(territory of) jurisdiction’, from Latin distringere ‘draw apart’.