See also: Townie

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From town +‎ -ie.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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townie (plural townies)

  1. (UK, US) A person living in a university area who is not associated with the university.
    • 1947 November, “College football business”, in Kiplinger Magazine, page 36:
      Professional gamblers have a cushy racket in college football because old grads and even townies of college localities are sentimental bettors and easy to separate from their money.
    • 1994, Terry O'Banion, A Learning College for the 21st Century, page 11:
      School is an ivory tower on the hill; it nestles in the gated groves of academe. It’s residents do not mix with “townies.”
    • 2004, Terry Gross, All I Did Was Ask, page 336:
      In Spike Lee's movie School Daze you play a townie who's very hostile to the college students from out of town.
  2. (UK) A person who has moved from a town or city to a rural area. Especially, one who is perceived not to have adopted rural ways.
    • 1914 June 6, Roper Lethbridge, “Village Words”, in The Saturday Review, page 737:
      [Hamlet] was only repeating the phrase of an ordinary English rustic when jeering at a “townie”—whom he suspected of being a gutter-snipe—that “He don’t know a hawk from a hernshaw”.
    • 1998, Ken Ashton, “Preface”, in Graham Irwin, A Farm of Our Own, page 8:
      From being a born-and-bred townie from north London, to a 36-year-old part-time farmer and full-time businessman is no mean achievement.
    • 2003, Rob Humphreys, The Rough Guide to London, page v:
      The term cockney originally meant cock’s egg or misshapen egg such as a young hen might lay, in other words a lily-livered townie as opposed to a strong countryman.
  3. (UK) A person familiar with the town (urbanised centre of a city) and with going out on the town; a street-wise person.
  4. (UK, derogatory) A chav.
  5. (US) A working-class citizen in a metropolitan area.
  6. (UK, Australia, New Zealand, informal) A person who lives in a city or town, or has an urban outlook.
    • 1949 March and April, F. G. Roe, “I Saw Three Englands–2”, in Railway Magazine, page 83:
      Here I parted with my fellow-townies, whose home shed at Millhouses covers fields where I played as a child.
    • 1999, Richard D. Lewis, When Cultures Collide: Managing Successfully Across Cultures[1], page 191:
      The modern Aussie is a townie through and through. Australia is the least densely populated country on earth; it is also among the most highly urbanised.
    • 2002, Graeme Davison, “Rural Sustainability in Historical Perspective”, in Chris Cocklin, Jacqui Dibden, editors, Sustainability and Change in Rural Australia, University Of New South Wales Press, page 40:
      In the 1940′s, a social survey of Victorian country towns found a similar gap between the interests and outlooks of farmers and townies, and an underlying fear on the part of the townsfolk.
    • 2005, Marc Brodie, “Chapter 9: The Politics of Rural Nostalgia between the Wars”, in Graeme Davison, Marc Brodie, editors, Struggle Country: The Rural Ideal in Twentieth-Century Australia, page 9.9:
      In that sense, the townies, not the farmers, were the inheritors of a pioneer capacity for hard work.
    • 2008, Jim Sharman, Blood & Tinsel: A Memoir, Melbourne University Publishing, page 18:
      Earlier, there would probably have been a grudge match between two townies, or locals.

Synonyms

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  • (chav): See synonyms at chav.

Antonyms

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  • (antonym(s) of person who lives in a city or town or has an urban outlook): cocky ("farmer")
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See also

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Anagrams

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