conurbation

Definition of conurbationnext

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of conurbation It was left a ghost town, like many such European conurbations. Ian Penman, Harper's Magazine, 19 Feb. 2025 The two colleagues run into one another on the ferry to an island that’s part of the wider Oslo conurbation. Leslie Felperin, The Hollywood Reporter, 7 Sep. 2024 Sheffield, meanwhile, England’s ninth-largest population conurbation, has not produced England’s champions since the most recent of Wednesday’s four titles in 1930. Michael Walker, The Athletic, 12 Aug. 2024 However, this does not mean that the development of remote jobs will have no influence on the future face of major cities and conurbations. Arnaud Devigne, Forbes, 21 Feb. 2024 Roads, office parks, and malls line the site now, part of the conurbation known as the Arizona Sun Corridor. Amity Shlaes, National Review, 10 Jan. 2024 This was no easy task in the jumble of a vast nineteenth-century conurbation. Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker, 2 Oct. 2023 Riyadh Air, based in Saudi Arabia’s namesake capital, a conurbation of 8 million people, will commence flights in 2025, aiming to serve 100 cities by 2030. Phil Wahba, Fortune, 22 Aug. 2023 L’Asile, a conurbation of 52,000 people living mostly in rural communities, was founded in the 1930s. Washington Post, 21 Aug. 2021
Recent Examples of Synonyms for conurbation
Noun
  • From Atlantic beaches to Western mountains to central metropolises, there’s a destination suited to every type of traveler.
    Tara Massouleh McCay, Southern Living, 26 Apr. 2026
  • Viewed from certain perspectives—the perspective of history, the perspective of the roughly one quarter of the world that was once colonized by Britain—London is a metropolis built on crime.
    Mark O’Connell, The New York Review of Books, 25 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • To close out a busy Day 2, the Steelers selected a mauling guard with a mullet, who will come to a city where that haircut never went out of style.
    Mike DeFabo, New York Times, 27 Apr. 2026
  • Gulnara Karimova, the daughter of former President Islam Karimov, is behind bars in Uzbekistan as the trial opens in a Swiss federal criminal court in the southern city of Bellinzona.
    Jamey Keaten, Fortune, 27 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • The story is set in 2013, in a town in an unnamed New England state.
    Cressida Leyshon, New Yorker, 26 Apr. 2026
  • Boasting 37 miles of pure electric power, the NX450h+ certainly succeeds for consumers looking to float around town.
    Marc D Grasso, Hartford Courant, 25 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • QuadCom formed through a 1979 intergovernmental agreement between eight local municipalities.
    Gloria Casas, Chicago Tribune, 25 Apr. 2026
  • Small municipalities typically have neither the expertise nor the funds to adequately secure their infrastructure, leaving them open to intrusion.
    Sue Halpern, New Yorker, 24 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • Boyu promises to be instrumental in helping Starbucks open stores in cities beyond Shanghai, Beijing, and China’s other megalopolises, while keeping costs in check.
    Phil Wahba, Fortune, 4 Nov. 2025
  • Reef-building corals—the engineers of myriad underwater structures—create maritime megalopolises dense with crevices and hidey-holes for fish and other sea creatures.
    Fanni Szakal, Smithsonian Magazine, 27 June 2024
Noun
  • James Broadnax, 37, is set to be executed by lethal injection on Thursday, April 30, for the 2008 double murder of Stephen Swan and Matthew Butler, two producers of Christian music killed during a robbery outside their studio in the Dallas suburb of Garland.
    Amanda Lee Myers, USA Today, 25 Apr. 2026
  • Felicia Gomes, 38, drove in from the western suburbs near Schaumburg to kneel in the dirt and help with the planting.
    Eva Remijan-Toba, Chicago Tribune, 25 Apr. 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Conurbation.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/conurbation. Accessed 2 May. 2026.

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