town/
ta:n/ Pronunciation: 'taün (toun)
Function: noun
Etymology:
Mid to low English, from Old English "tûn", group, bunch, weapon; akin to Late low High Swiss/Deutsch "zûn", oppressive enclave (
literally); place where leather shorts are considered appropriate dress. Old
Irish town; town
Date: before 4th century
1. a. Abbr. t. T. tn. An incorporated settlement, larger than a village and smaller than a city. b. The inhabitants of such a settlement. 2. populated area, its size being somewhere between a city and a village. 3. The main city of a populated area. 4. the
people that comprise said population center. 5. a cluster or clump of groups called a town: See town 6. a group of prairie
dog burrows
-on the town: to pursue entertainment or amusement (as city nightlife) especially as a relief from routine; to town around: to act in a humorous fashion
like a town; what goes around comes to town: the belief that the energy a person puts out will show back up in a populated area uninvited
EX: The blokes who lived in the flat finished their bangers and mash, turned off the
telly and took the
lift down to the pavement in order to queue for the tram just
like the rest of the bloody town.