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CITY{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="225" align="right" style="margin-left:15px;" !align="center" bgcolor="#66FFCC" colspan="3"|CITY ''(Citytv)'' |- |align="center" colspan="3" style="padding:10px;"| |- !align="center" colspan="3" style="border-bottom:3px solid gray; font-size: smaller"|''Slogan: "Everywhere!"'' |- !align="center" bgcolor="#66FFCC" colspan="3"|Toronto, Ontario |- |align="center" colspan="3"|Channel 57 / Cable 7 |- !align="left" valign="top"|Owner |colspan="2" valign="top"|CHUM Limited |- !align="left" valign="top"|Founded |colspan="2" valign="top"|1972 |- !align="left" valign="top"|Signal Radius |colspan="2" valign="top"|1740 kW (total) |- !bgcolor="#66FFCC" colspan="3"|Citytv System |-align="center" |valign="top" width="33%"|''CKVU'' (Vancouver, British Columbia) |valign="top" width="34%"|''CITY'' (Toronto, Ontario) |valign="top" width="70"| |} CITY (Citytv Toronto) is a television station based in Toronto, Ontario. Owned by CHUM Limited, it is Canada's third-oldest UHF television station and the flagship station of the Citytv system. Broadcasting for the first time on September 28, 1972, CITY was best known for its unconventional approach to news and local programming, an approach that continues today and has carried over to the other stations in the Citytv system. ''(See Citytv for more on these practices.)'' Originally owned by Channel Seventy-Nine Ltd., a group which consisted of Phyllis Switzer, Moses Znaimer, Jerry Grafstein, Edgar Cowan and others, CITY was in debt by 1975. Multiple Access Ltd. (the owners of CFCF in Montreal, Quebec) purchased 45% of the station. Three years later, it sold its stake to CHUM Limited. CITY was purcahsed outright by CHUM Limited in 1981 with the sale of Moses Znaimer's interest in the station. Znaimer would remain with the station as an executive. From 1972 until 1975, working at Toronto's The Second City, Dan Aykroyd moonlighted as CITY-TV's announcer until he went to New York City to join ''Saturday Night Live''. CITY originally broadcast on the ultra high frequency band with a 31 kilowatt signal on channel 79, since all the very high frequency licences in the Toronto area were taken. In 1976, the station began broadcasting at 208 kW from the CN Tower. The channel CITY broadcast on was changed from channel 79 to channel to 57 in July 1983, due to complaints that the station was interference with mobile radio in the Toronto area, and so that channels 70 to 83 could be reclaimed for use by new AMPS mobile phones in the Americas. On September 1, 1986, a transmitter was set up in Woodstock, Ontario, and a transmitter was set up in Ottawa, Ontario in 1996. CITY was also the first digital television station in Canada, and is using the ATSC standard recently approved by the CRTC. It is still continuing its analogue broadcasts, and the CRTC has made digital service completely voluntary. The signal was first broadcast on January 16, 2003, and became a regular signal on March 3 of that same year. In 1988 CITY (along with all of the other CHUM-owned stations) moved to its current headquarters at the CHUM-City Building, making it one of the most recognizable landmarks in the city. For almost thirty years, CITY was the only Citytv station in Canada (therefore making Citytv and CITY interchangeable names for the station). In 2001, however, Citytv became a two-station system when CHUM purchased Vancouver, British Columbia's CKVU from Global Television Network. Some small cablesystems in Canada carry CITY as sort of a superstation. ==See also== *List of programs broadcast by Citytv ==References== * [http://members.shaw.ca/nelsonmedia/Other/CITY.htm Citytv bio] from Nelson Media's Directory of Canadian Television. ==External link== * http://toronto.citytv.com/ Television stations in Ontario Toronto media CHUM Limited CityA city is an urban area, differentiated from a town, village, or hamlet (place) by size, population density, importance, or legal status. In most parts of the world cities are generally substantial and nearly always have an urban core, but in the United States many incorporated areas which have a very modest population, or a suburban or even mostly rural character, are designated as cities. ''City'' can also be a synonym for "Central business district" or a "city centre". ==Introduction== A city usually consists of residential, industrial and business areas together with administrative functions which may relate to a wider geographical area. A large share of a city's area is generally taken up by houses, roads, and streets. Lakes and rivers may be the only undeveloped areas within the city. "The city is a human habitat that allows people to form relations with others at various levels of intimacy while remaining entirely anonymous." (This definition was the subject of an exhibition at the Israeli pavilion at the 2000 Venice Biennale of architecture) The difference between ''towns'' and ''cities'' is differently understood in different parts of the English language. There is no one standard international definition of a city: the term may be used either for a town possessing city status; for an urban locality exceeding an arbitrary population size; for a town dominating other towns with particular regional economic or administrative significance. Although ''city'' can refer to an agglomeration including suburban and satellite areas, the term is not appropriate for a conurbation (cluster) of ''distinct'' urban places, nor for a wider metropolitan area including more than one city, each acting as a focus for parts of the area. In the United Kingdom, a ''city'' is a town which has been known as a city since time immemorial, or which has received city status by royal charter — which is normally granted on the basis of size, importance or royal connection (traditional pointers have been whether the town has a cathedral or a university). Some cathedral cities, for example St. David's in Wales, are quite small, and may not be known as cities in common parlance. (See the list of cities in the United Kingdom.) A similar system existed in the medieval Low Countries where a landlord would grant settlements City rights in the Netherlands (city rights) that settlements without city rights didn't have. This include the privilege to put up city walls, hold markets or set up a judicial court. An interesting phenomenon in American English is the generalisation of the term ''city'' to all settlements. Britons may be bemused by forms with fields headed, not ''Town'' and ''Postal code'', but ''City'' and ''ZIP'', even though the person needing to fill it in could be living in a city, a town without city status, or even a village or hamlet. In turn, many Americans often talk of "City Halls" when referring to town halls in quite small European towns and villages. A possible reason for this phenomenon is that, when America was colonised, settlers enthusiastically gave the name "city" to their new settlements, predicting (rightly or wrongly) they would become great cities. For example, Salt Lake City, Utah was a village of 148 people who immediately laid out street plans and founded ''Great Salt Lake City'' (originally named for the nearby Great Salt Lake). A century and a half later, it actually is city-sized. Strangely, even though Americans are well aware that "village" means something smaller than a town, the word has often been co-opted by enterprising developers to make their projects sound welcoming and friendly. The result are so-called villages with 20 and 30-story high-rises, like Westwood, Los Angeles, California in Los Angeles. ==Geography== [[Image:Haarlem-City-Map-1550.jpg||thumb|225px|Map of Haarlem, the Netherlands, of around 1550. The city is completely surrounded by a city wall and defensive canal. The square shape is inspired by Jerusalem.]]The geographies of cities are diverse. Often cities will either be coastal and have a harbour or be situated near a river giving economic advantage. Ship transport on rivers and oceans were (and in most cases still are) cheaper and more efficient than road transport over long distances. The kernels of older European cities, which have not been extensively rebuilt, tend to have city centres where the streets are jumbled together, often seemingly without a structural plan. This is a legacy of earlier unplanned or organic development. Today this is usually perceived by tourists to be picturesque. Modern city planning has seen many different schemes for how a city should look. The most commonly seen pattern is the grid plan, almost a rule in parts of the United States, and used for thousands of years in China. Derry was the first ever planned city in Ireland, begun in 1613, with the walls being completed 5 years later in 1618. The central diamond within a walled city with four gates was thought to be a good design for defence. The grid pattern chosen was subsequently much copied in the colonies of British North America [http://worldfacts.us/UK-Londonderry.htm]. Other forms may include a radial structure in which main roads converge on a central point, often the effect of successive growth over long time with concentric traces of town walls and citadels - recently supplemented by ring-roads that take traffic around the edge of a town. Many Netherlands cities are structured that way: a central square surrounded by a concentric canals. Every city expansion would imply a new circle (canals + town walls). In cities like Amsterdam and Haarlem this pattern is still clearly visible. ==History of cities== Towns and cities have a long history, although opinions vary on whether any particular ancient settlement can be considered to be a city. The first true towns are sometimes considered to be large settlements where the inhabitants were no longer simply farmers of the surrounding area, but began to take on specialised occupations, and where to trade, food storage and power was centralized. Societies that live in cities are often called civilizations. By this definition, the first towns we know of were located in Mesopotamia, such as Ur, and along the Nile, the Indus Valley Civilisation and China. Before this time it was rare for settlements to reach significant size, although there were exceptions such as Jericho, Çatalhöyük and Mehrgarh. The growth of ancient and medieval empires led to ever greater capital cities and seats of provincial administration, with Rome, its eastern successor Constantinople and successive China and later Indian capitals approaching or exceeding the half-million population level (it is estimated that Rome's population exceeded one million people by the end of the last century BCE). Similar large administrative and ceremonial centres emerged in other areas, though on a smaller scale. During the European Middle Ages, a town was as much a political entity as a collection of houses. City residence brought freedom from customary rural obligations to lord and community: ''"Stadtluft macht frei"'' ("City air makes you free") was a saying in Germany. In Continental Europe cities with a legislature of their own wasn't unheard of, the laws for towns as a rule other than for the countryside, the lord of a town often being another than for surrounding land. In the Holy Roman Empire (i.e. medieval Germany and Italy) some cities had no other lord than the emperor. In exceptional cases like Venice, Genoa or Lübeck, cities themselves became powerful states, sometimes taking surrounding areas under their control or establishing extensive maritime empires. Similar phenomena existed elsewhere, as in the case of Sakai, Osaka, which enjoyed a considerable autonomy in late medieval Japan. Most towns remained far smaller places, so that in 1500 only some two dozen places in the world contained more than 100,000 inhabitants: as late as 1700 there were fewer than fifty, a figure which would rise thereafter to 300 in 1900. A small city of the early modern period might contain as few as 10,000 inhabitants, a town far fewer still. While the city-states, or polis, of the Mediterranean and Baltic Sea languished from the 16th century, Europe's larger capitals benefited from the growth of commerce following the emergence of an Atlantic Ocean economy fuelled by the silver of Peru. By the 18th century, London and Paris rivalled the well-developed regionally-traditional capital cities of Baghdad, Beijing, Istanbul, Kyoto and Venice. The growth of modern industry from the late 18th century onward led to massive urbanization and the rise of new great cities, first in Europe and then in other regions, as new opportunities brought huge numbers of rural migration into urban areas. Today the world's population is about half urban, with millions still streaming annually into the growing cities of Asia, Africa and Latin America. ==Modern conceptions== ===Traditional approach=== A universal foundational story to cities has been in place and accepted for a long time. As this approach falls short of explaining a number of aspects of city life, such as the diversity between cities, new ways have been sought. Influenced by post-structuralism a new approach was born: using spatial thinking it is possible to not only fill the gaps, but indeed replace the old completely. Three characteristics have been identified as defining a city: the number of people to area (density), the city network of the city, as well as a particular way of life. None of these characteristics alone is enough to make a place a city. Until recently cities were almost exclusively viewed as part of a single, linear line of development. Starting with the ancient Greece city-state, this linear approach placed each city somewhere, and it was believed that it was only a matter of time until the next stage along the prescript path of advancement was reached. For each stage an exemplar was identified. Step by step from Athens onwards to Venice and London, Los Angeles, California seemed to be the ultimate stage of a postmodern city. Such an approach regarded a city as a single static entity, which could be studied disconnected in time and space. This leads to a theoretical framework with little connection to real cities, but these were simply seen as less clear examples. In spite of apparent shortcomings, this approach is still very commonplace in respected and popular publications. ===Shortcomings=== Despite its wide acceptance this traditional approach to cities had serious shortcomings. Firstly, leaving the latest stage aside, it was completely eurocentric. It was believed that every city in the world could be compared with a past stage in the history of one Europe city. Secondly, there was no real explanation when and how changes occurred, how another stage in the line of development was achieved. There seemed no need to follow the changes of one city, but instead attention was turned to another exemplar. Thirdly, the disconnected view of cities is problematic. It implies that history, culture and connections of a place do not influence a place, which is questionable. Some thinkers argue that a history ignoring connections is necessary incomplete. Fourthly, the traditional approach missed to define what makes a city. It is unclear why one place is regarded as a city while another one is not. Lewis Mumford argued in 1937 for a social dimension, describing cities as ''geographical plexuses''. Finally, viewing cities as a single body misses modern conceptions that there is more than one story to a place. The city of an aristocrat will surely differ from that of a slave. This also reflects a shift away from one single history of the powerful élites (often referred to as ''city élites'') to a multidimensional perception of history. The notion of city rhythm has been introduced to highlight the different aspects of city life... The term ''city'' can be used to mean either an area of contiguous urbanization or a particular municipality (an [http://www.demographia.com/db-world-muni.htm area within the political borders of an incorporated municipality]). There is a substantial variation in municipalities around the world. The largest municipality, Chongqing, is approximately the same size as the state of Indiana and contains much more rural territory than continuous urbanization. In most cases, however, the continuous urbanization popularly thought of as the city extends well beyond the boundaries of the core incorporated city. ===Modern approach=== As a modern approach to cities, urban thinking analyzes various issues that arise in urban areas. It focuses largely upon City Networks and internal divisions which helps create a better understanding of the dynamics of cities. Using such spatial thinking, it is possible to understand various aspects for which the traditional approach did not provide an adequate explanation. One important aspect of spatial thinking is looking at the connections of a city. Such connections allow one to understand the unique character of a place. Rather than treating all cities the same, places are seen as interconnected through networks of culture, economics, trade or history. So while London and Tokyo are economically linked through stock markets, Graz and Stockholm are linked via the ''Cultural Capital of Europe''. These networks overlap and are concentrated in cities. Arguably this concentration of networks creates a unique feeling of a place. Such networks, however, do not only link cities with cities, but also a city to its surroundings. The notion of a ecological footprint reflects the idea that a city on its own is not sustainable: it depends on produce from its surroundings, it needs trade links and other connections for economics viability. Looking at networks, it becomes possible to explain the rise and fall of cities. This has to do with the changing importance of connections and is maybe best illustrated with the arrival of Spain colony in The Americas. Within a short time, connections to Madrid became more important than connections to the former centre Tenochtitlán. The concentration of networks in cities can be used as an explanation of urbanization. It is the access to certain networks that attracts people. As various networks spatially run together in a confined area, people gather in cities. At the same time, this concentration of people means the introduction of new networks, such as social links, increasing the creation of new possibilities within cities. Urban social movements are a direct result of this possibility of making new connections. It is this openness to new connections that makes cities both attractive and to a certain degree unpredictable. Another important aspect of modern urban thinking is looking at the divisions within a city. This internal differentiation is linked to the external connections of a city. As places of meeting history, cities are hybrid and heterogeneous. Hybrid they are as the connections which link places are bilateral, involving giving and taking in both directions. Heterogeneous they are because of the dynamism of cities. New encounters are ongoing processes where social relations and differences are constantly negotiated and shaped, reflecting the unequal power (sociology) involved. Neither the internal differentiations nor the connections and city network of a place on their own define a city. Internal divisions are caused by external links, while at the same time connections to the outside open up the possibility of new social distance. Divisions and connections in every city are intertwined, and only by considering both aspects of spatial thinking the complexity of cities is approachable. Immigration illustrates this interconnection of external networks and internal divisions well. The networks concentrated in the core of the city attract immigrants. As they immigrate, the newcomers bring along their histories, bringing new networks or enforcing existing ones. At the same time, their history offers opportunities to identify with or likewise exclude. Division and connection come hand in hand. Rather than attempting to eradicate such tensions and contradictions in the theoretical framework, modern urban thinking – influenced by poststructuralist thought – accounts for both sides. Static universal bodies are replaced by multidimensional networks, allowing for fluidity and dynamism. ==Global cities== A global city, also known as a world city, is a promiment centre of trade, banking, finance, innovations, and markets. The term "global city", as opposed to megacity, was coined by Saskia Sassen in a seminal 1991 work. Whereas "megacity" refers to any city of enormous size, a global city is one of enormous power or influence. Global cities, according to Sassen, have more in common with each other than with other cities in their host nations. Bangkok, Beijing, Brussels, Chicago, Hong Kong, Johannesburg, London, Moscow, New York, New York, Paris, Seoul, Shanghai, Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo and Toronto are commonly referred to as global cities, however, the term is also applied to other cities. The notion of global cities regards the power of cities as contained within cities. The city is seen as a container where skills and resources are concentrated. The more successful city is able to concentrate more of these skills and resources. This makes the city itself more powerful in terms that it can influence what is happening around the world. Following this view of cities, it is possible to rank the world's cities hierarchically (John Friedmann and Goetz Wolff, "World City Formation: An Agenda for Research and Action," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 6, no. 3 (1982): 319.). Critics of the notion point out to the different realms of power. The term ''global city'' narrowly focuses on economics. Cities like Rome are powerful in religion terms. Additionally, it has been questioned whether the city itself can be regarded as an actor. In 1995 Kanter argued that successful cities can be identified by three elements. To be successful, a city needs to be good thinkers (concepts), good makers (competence) or good traders (city network). The interplay of these three elements, Kanter argued, means that good cities are not planned but managed. ==Environmental effects== Modern cities are known for creating their own microclimates. This is due to the large clustering of hard surfaces that heat up in sunlight and that channel rainwater into underground ducts. As a result, city weather is often windier and cloudier than the weather in the surrounding countryside. Conversely, because these effects make cities warmer (''urban heat shield'' or ''urban heat islands'') than the surrounding area, tornadoes tend to go around cities. Additionally towns can cause significant downstream weather effects. Waste and sewage are two major problems for cities, as is air pollution coming from internal combustion engines (see public transport). The impact of cities on places elsewhere, be it hinterlands or places far away, is considered in the notion of Ecological Footprint (''ecological footprint''). ==Inner city== ''Main article: Inner city'' In the United States, United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland, the term "inner city" is sometimes used with the connotation of being an area, perhaps a ghetto, where people are less educated and wealthy and where there is more crime. These connotations are less common in other Western countries, as deprived areas are located in varying parts of other Western cities. In fact, with the gentrification of some formerly run-down central city areas the reverse connotation can apply - in Australia the term "outer suburban" applied to a person implies a lack of sophistication. For instance, in Paris the inner city is the richest part of the metropolitan area, where housing is the most expensive, and where elites and high-income individuals dwell. The United States, in particular, suffers from a culture of anti-urbanism that some say dates back as far as Thomas Jefferson who wrote that "The mobs of great cities add just so much to the support of pure government as sores do to the strength of the human body." On the businessmen who brought manufacturing industry into cities and hence increased the population density necessary to supply the workforce, he wrote "the manufactures of the great cities... have begotten a depravity of morals, a dependence and corruption, which renders them an undesirable accession to a country whose morals are sound." Modern anti-urban attitudes are to be found in America in the form of a planning profession that continues to develop land on a low-density suburban basis, where access to amenities, work and shopping is provided almost exclusively by car rather than on foot. However, there is a growing movement in North America called "New Urbanism" that calls for a return to traditional city planning methods where mixed-use zoning allows people to walk from one type of land-use to another. The idea is that housing, shopping, office space, and leisure facilities are all provided within walking distance of each other, thus reducing the demand for road-space and also improving the efficiency and effectiveness of mass transit. ==See also== ===Entertainment=== * ''The City (book by Maximilian Weber)'', a sociology book by Max Weber * ''City (book by Clifford D. Simak)'', a science fiction novel by Clifford D. Simak * ''The City (movie)'' * ''City (Strapping Young Lad album)'', a metal album by Canada band, "Strapping Young Lad" * ''The City (Canadian series)'' * ''Citytv'' ===Lists=== * List of cities by country * List of cities in Australia * List of cities in Canada * Cities of Japan * Cities of the Philippines * List of cities in the United States * aire urbaine * List of metropolitan areas by population * Self-proclaimed Capitals of the World * Thirty most populous cities in the world * List of fictional cities ===Miscellaneous=== * benign neglect * The City * County * Independent city * Megacity * Municipal government * planned city * Urban planning * Ville * Burning Man, a week-long festival as a temporary city (housing 35,000 residents in 2004) ==References== *Toynbee, Arnold (ed), ''Cities of Destiny'', New York: McGraw-Hill, 1967. Pan historical/geographical essays, many images. Starts with "Athens", ends with "The Coming World City-Ecumenopolis". ==External links== *[http://www.populationdata.net/palmaresvilles.html All 1M+ major urban areas] *[http://www.p.lodz.pl/I35/personal/jw37/EUROPE/europe.html Place Names of Europe] *[http://www.tageo.com/index.htm Place Names of the world - Index of 2M cities] *[http://www.nationmaster.com/graph-T/geo_lar_cit&int=-1&b_ac=1 Most populous city of each country] *[http://www.world-gazetteer.com/st/statb.htm For all countries, number of cities per size category] *[http://www.nationmaster.com/graph-T/geo_lar_cit_pop_cap&int=-1 For each country, part of its population that lives in its most populous city] (with some odd figures due to the comparison of data of different years) *[http://www.nlc.org/nlc_org/site/ The National League of Cities] (United States) *[http://www.innercitypress.org Inner City Press] (Weekly publication on cities, United States) *[http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/cgi-local/DHI/dhi.cgi?id=dv1-52 ''Dictionary of the History of ideas'':] The City *[http://www.morganquitno.com/cit05list.htm Morgan Quinto's 11th Annual America's Safest (and Most Dangerous) Cities] *[http://www.skyscraperpage.com A friendly website designed by skyscraper enthusiasts featuring diagrams and descriptions of the buildings of cities around the world.] *[http://www.bifurcaciones.cl bifuraciones, urban cultural studies journal] Urban studies and planning Cities la:Urbs simple:city CityAlston says this type of thing shouldn't be here, it should be in Wiktionary? Is this correct? It's very good though ;) ----- I've decided to redirect "City" to "Central Business District", because the latter word is the proper definition of the area. --- (from JustAnyone) I thought it would be good to have a set of information about a city that includes how things work. ----- I'm surprised that in a list such as list of cities in Oklahoma it seems that any place in the US with a population of more than 1,000 is a city; anything less is a town. In the UK somewhere with only 1,000 people would be called a village. Is this nomenclature correct? User:Shantavira 18:26, 11 May 2004 (UTC) ----- What's up with the link to the toki pona 'pedia at the bottom of the page? It doesn't seem to be working too well...who is running that 'pedia anyways?User:Braaropolis — User:Braaropolis | User talk:Braaropolis 05:11, 25 May 2004 (UTC) :Not sure of the details, but according to recent mailing list discussion toki pona is now being treated as a lesser pedia than others. Klingon is also in this "lesser" category. "Proper" wikipedias are not to link to these "lesser" ones. User:Pcb21 User_talk:Pcb21 12:05, 1 Jun 2004 (UTC) ---- Perhaps a merger or disambiguation or alternative use is in order, see the City and The_City_%28book_by_Maximilian_Weber%29. --User:Piotrus 10:11, 1 Jun 2004 (UTC) :I've made The City a disambiguation page, and added appropiate see alsos to this page. I think everyone should be able to find what they are looking for with this set-up. User:Pcb21 User_talk:Pcb21 12:05, 1 Jun 2004 (UTC) ---- I removed the text below from the opening of the article. I honestly don't understand what it means or what it refers to. User:Bkonrad≠User talk:Bkonrad 13:01, 12 Aug 2004 (UTC) :Definition of City: A fixed place of human habitation that allows people to form relations with others at various level of intimacy, while remaining entirely anonymous. (Presented at the Israeli pavillion at the 7th Venice Biennale. Exhibition curated by Architect Hillel Schocken) == Size of a city == The fact that you don't understand something does not mean it is not worthwhile for you to search. Look up http://www.intbau.org/essay5.htm and you might find some sense in that definition. Hillel Schocken "I removed the text below from the opening of the article. I honestly don't understand what it means or what it refers to. older≠wiser 13:01, 12 Aug 2004 (UTC) Definition of City: A fixed place of human habitation that allows people to form relations with others at various level of intimacy, while remaining entirely anonymous. (Presented at the Israeli pavillion at the 7th Venice Biennale. Exhibition curated by Architect Hillel Schocken)" == Modern Conceptions == The "Modern Conceptions" section is not entirely credible. Who is taking this approach? Is this how most people conceive of cities, or is it a theory developed and held by a few academics? The entire section is written in the passive voice, and that's the lazy way to try to be authoritative without actually citing any authorities. More fundamentally, does this particular theory of urban function/development belong in the "Cities" article, or does it deserve its own article (i.e., "The x Theory of Urban Function")? User:LaurenceJA 01:54, 18 Oct 2004 (UTC) See other meanings of words starting from letter: CCA | CB | CD | CE | CF | CG | CH | CI | CJ | CK | CL | CM | CN | CO | CP | CR | CS | CT | CU | CW | CX | CY | CZ |Words begining with City: CITY City City City-Air City-building_game City-County City-High-Rise-Building_Leipzig City-state City-states CITY-TV City-wall CityAndColourThe_DeathOfMe.jpeg Cityartist CityBeat CityBerlin Citybus Citybus_(Hong_Kong) Citybus_Limited CityDesk CityDesk CityFlyer CityFlyer_Express Cityhall Cityhuntr Cityjet CityLine Cityline CityLink Citylink_Plaza Citymdw Cityofheroes Citypartizan Citypartizan Cityplace Cityplace_Station Cityplace_Tower CityPoint CityPulse CityPulse CityRail CityRail CityRail Cityrail CityRailSydney CityRailSydney CityRail_CityCircle_anticlockwise CityRail_CityCircle_clockwise CityRail_Clearways_Project CityRail_line CityRail_regional_line CityRail_stations_without_Easy_Access CityRail_stations_with_Easy_Access CityRail_stations_with_Easy_Access_(planned) CityRail_terminus CityRover CityRover Cityscape Cityspire CitySpire_Center CityStages CitySuper Citysuper Citys_of_Kosova Citys_of_Kosovo Citys_of_Kosovo CityTeam_Ministries CityTicket CityTrain CityTrain Citytrain CityTrain_railway_lines CityTrain_stations CityTV Citytv Citytv Citytv_Barcelona Citytv_Bogotá Citytv_Toronto Citytv_Vancouver CityU Cityvantage Citywide_Church_(Ottawa) City_&_County_of_Honolulu City_&_South_London_Railway City_(album) City_(book_by_Clifford_D._Simak) City_(Jane_Siberry_album) City_(Japan) City_(japan) City_(Strapping_Young_Lad_album) City_(SYL_album) City_17 City_academies City_academy City_Airline City_alderman City_and_colour City_and_County_of_Honolulu City_and_County_of_San_Francisco City_and_County_of_St._John City_and_County_of_St._John's City_and_District_of_St_Albans City_and_East_London City_and_Guilds_College City_and_Guilds_College_Union City_and_Guilds_College_Union City_and_Guilds_of_London_Institute City_and_Industrial_Development_Corporation City_area City_Arts_Centre City_Bank City_Beautiful City_Beautiful_Movement City_Beautiful_movement City_bell City_Block City_Block City_block City_block City_block_(disambiguation) City_block_distance City_Boy City_boy City_brasil City_brazil City_Brewery City_Brewing_Company City_Brewing_Company City_Building_Series City_car City_center City_centre City_Centre,_Australian_Capital_Territory City_charter City_Circle City_Circle_(tram_route) City_Circle_line_link City_clerk City_code_names City_College City_College,_New_York City_College_of_Baltimore City_College_of_New_York City_College_of_New_York City_College_of_San_Francisco City_College_of_San_Francisco City_College_of_The_City_University_of_New_York City_College_of_the_City_University_of_New_York City_comedy City_Commission_government City_Commission_government City_commission_government City_Connexion_Airlines City_Council City_council City_councillor City_councillors City_councils City_Creek City_Creek_(Salt_Lake_City) City_Creek_Canyon City_Deep City_designated_by_government_ordinance City_designated_by_government_ordinance City_Developments City_Developments_Limited City_dove City_father City_flag_images City_Gate City_gate City_gates City_Gate_(Malta) City_government City_government_in_the_State_of_Washington City_government_in_the_State_of_Washington City_government_in_the_state_of_Washington City_government_in_the_state_of_Washington City_Ground City_Hall City_hall City_Hall,_Cardiff City_Hall,_Dublin City_Hall,_Hong_Kong City_halls City_Hall_(6_Line) City_hall_(administration) City_hall_(disambiguation) City_Hall_(film) City_hall_(film) City_Hall_(Haarlem) City_hall_(Hong_Kong) City_Hall_(IRT_Lexington_Avenue_Line_station) City_Hall_(London) City_Hall_(London) City_Hall_(Manhattan) City_Hall_(movie) City_Hall_(New_York) City_Hall_(New_York_City_Subway) City_Hall_(New_York_Subway) City_Hall_London City_Hall_MRT_Station 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City_of_Sydney City_of_Sydney City_of_Tea_Tree_Gully City_of_Tea_Tree_Gully City_of_The_Dalles,_OR City_of_The_Dalles,_Oregon City_of_Thi City_of_Toronto_Book_Award City_of_Toronto_proclamations City_of_Townawanda,_New_York City_of_Townawanda,_New_York City_of_Trinidad City_of_Truro City_of_truro City_of_Tshwane_Metropolitan_Municipality City_of_Vancouver_Book_Award City_of_Vaughan City_of_Villains City_of_Wakefield City_of_Wakefield City_of_Warrnambool City_of_Washington_Pipe_Band City_of_Waterford City_of_Waterloo City_of_Wells City_of_Westminster City_of_Whitehorse City_of_Whittlesea City_of_Winchester City_of_Wolverhampton City_of_Wyndham City_of_Yarra City_of_York City_of_York_(constituency) City_of_York_(constituency) City_of_York_(disambiguation) City_of_York_(UK_Parliament_constituency) City_of_York_(UK_Parliament_constituency) City_of_Zion City_of_Zion_(Mormonism) City_of_Zug City_of_Zurich City_One City_One_(KCRC) City_on_a_Hill City_on_a_Hill City_on_Fire 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City_University_of_New_York City_University_of_New_York City_university_of_new_york City_University_of_New_York_Athletic_Conference City_University_of_New_York_System City_Upon_a_Hill City_upon_a_Hill City_upon_a_Hill City_upon_a_hill City_View,_SC City_View,_South_Carolina City_Waites City_Waites City_wall City_wall City_walls City_Watch City_Weekly City_Wok City_Wok
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