NOUN
- a planned urban community created in a rural or undeveloped area and designed to be self-sufficient with its own housing and education and commerce and recreation
How To Use new town In A Sentence
- The old village was razed to the ground, and very quickly the new town of Abbeyleix became established.
- A councillor has donated a hand bell to a new town council in memory of his wife.
- The Cleveland Show's Cleveland Brown has to deal with a lot of pressure since moving out of Quahog, R.I. He's had to acclimate to a new town (Stoolbend, Va.) and a new job, all while taking on a new stepdaughter and stepson in Roberta and Rallo. Exclusive Video: First Look at The Cleveland Show's "Live" Episode
- Few new parks were created, though a good deal of landscaping was carried out, particularly in new towns and on motorways.
- Both the New Town and the Old Town offer numerous lodgings in private houses and small family hotels.
- The people who planned Britain's new towns had a vision of clean modern housing for everyone.
- The tiny closes and wynds - entrances and alleyways - that line the street on either side offer glimpses of the Old and New Towns.
- As the line did not run through or near the Edeowie township the Government decided to survey new towns at Edeowie and Parachilna.
- The Hundred Years' War rattled through the bastides (medieval new towns) when the region was frontier territory between English and French.
- New Town, and Ellen was looking up the side-street that opened just opposite and revealed, menacing as the rattle of spears, the black rock and bastions of the Castle against the white beamless glare of the southern sky. The Judge