What is another word for the outskirts?

Pronunciation: [ðɪ ˈa͡ʊtskɜːts] (IPA)

The outskirts refer to the surrounding areas or suburbs of a city or town. There are several synonyms for outskirts that can be used to describe these areas. One option is the word "periphery," which means the outer edges of something. Another alternative is "fringe," which refers to the outermost part of a place or group. "Environs" can also be used to describe the area surrounding a city or town. "Outlying areas" is another common synonym for the outskirts, and "suburbs" is a more specific term that refers to residential areas outside of a city center. Overall, there are several synonyms for "the outskirts" that can add variety and specificity to your writing.

What are the hypernyms for The outskirts?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with The outskirts

  • I live in Hamburg; that's in the north. And I live on the outskirts of town. It looks like countryside.
    Cornelia Funke
  • I think actors have a choice of drawing attention to themselves or living on the outskirts.
    Rachel Weisz
  • On the outskirts of every agony sits some observant fellow who points.
    Virginia Woolf
  • Colleges being nothing but grooming schools for the middleclass non-identity which usually finds its perfect expression on the outskirts of the campus in rows of well-to-do houses with lawns and television sets in each living room with everybody looking at the same thing and thinking the same thing at the same time while the Japhies of the world go prowling in the wilderness...
    Jack Kerouac
  • 'Next morning the sun revealed a horrid spectacle on the vast plain south of PAnipat. On the actual field of the combat thirty-one distinct heaps of the slain were counted, the number of bodies in each ranging from 500 upwards to 1000 and in four up to 1500 a rough total of 28,000. In addition to these, the ditch round the Maratha camp was full of dead bodies, partly the victims of disease and famine during the long siege and partly wounded men who had crawled out of the fighting to die there. West and south of PAnipat city, the jungle and the road in the line of MarAtha retreat were littered with the remains of those who had fallen unresisting in the relentless DurrAni pursuit or from hunger and exhaustion. Their number - probably three-fourths non-combatants and one-fourth soldiers - could not have been far short of the vast total of those slain in the battlefield. 'The hundreds who lay down wounded, perished from the severity of the cold.'.... 'After the havoc of combat followed massacre in cold blood. Several hundreds of MarAthas had hidden themselves in the hostile city of PAnipat through folly or helplessness; and these were hunted out next day and put to the sword. According to one plausible account, the sons of Abdus Samad Khan and Mian Qutb received the DurrAni king's permission to avenge their father's death by an indiscriminate massacre of the MarAthas for one day, and in this way nearly nine thousand men perished [Bhau Bakhar, 123.]; these were evidently non-combatants. The eyewitness Kashiraj Pandit thus describes the scene: 'Every DurrAni soldier brought away a hundred or two of prisoners and slew them in the outskirts of their camp, crying out, When I started from our country, my mother, father, sister and wife told me to slay so may kAfirs for their sake after we had gained the victory in this holy war, so that the religious merit of this act [of infidel slaying] might accrue to them. In this way, thousands of soldiers and other persons were massacred. In the Shah's camp, except the quarters of himself and his nobles, every tent had a heap of severed heads before it. One may say that it was verily doomsday for the MarAtha people.'.... 158
    Ahmed Shah Durrani

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