uptown
noun/ˈʌptaʊn/US
Etymology
Charlotte: In use since the 1890s. The name's popularity faded in the 1930s but was revived in 1973.
Definitions
The residential part of a city, away from the commercial center.
The commercial center of town (in Charlotte, North Carolina).
- Charlotte / Douglas International Airport, a U.S. Air hub, is about twenty minutes from uptown and is the[…]
- Charlotte has a number of museums that give visitors an insider's perspective on the region, most of which are […] in uptown, and the Mint Museum of Art, 2730 Randolph Rd., […]
In the upper part of a town.
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Of or relating to an affluent area or population.
- uptown problems
- She's been living in her uptown world / I bet she's never had a backstreet guy
In or of the central commercial center of Charlotte, North Carolina.
- Thus when he raised hell and got a toilet in uptown Charlotte for Negroes, he was not regarded as an agitator but as a public-spirited citizen.
- […] he was operating a mobile unit in uptown Charlotte when he received a call at approximately 7:00 p.m. […]
- […] you might want to also check into Charlotte's uptown development corporation, which is a very similar set up[…]
To or in the upper part of a town.
- Let's go uptown and try out that new restaurant.
The central business district of Charlotte, North Carolina.
- Corporations were moving to Charlotte, and developers were buying rundown buildings in Uptown and replacing them with condominiums. But many low-income people still lived in Uptown and surrounding areas.
- Its proximity to Uptown and Bank of America Stadium ensures that this park has many visitors in addition to the regular neighborhood users.
A neighbourhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The neighborhood
- neighborUptown
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for uptown. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA