How to Use city-state in a Sentence

city-state

noun
  • Adjusting to life in Singapore won’t be much of a hassle since many signs in the culturally diverse city-state are in English.
    Ryan Hogg, Fortune Europe, 2 Oct. 2024
  • And the Asian city-state has won that accolade nine times in the last 11 years.
    Stacey Leasca, Travel + Leisure, 7 Dec. 2023
  • Just how the small city-state of less than 6 million people has come to be the preferred venue for top artists is no mystery.
    Time, 22 June 2023
  • On the tip of the Malaysian peninsula, the island city-state piled up sand to expand its coastline and reclaim land from the sea.
    TIME, 10 Oct. 2023
  • Some 550 years ago the last of the great city-states of the Maya civilization that had flourished in the Americas for centuries met their demise.
    Zach Zorich, Scientific American, 1 Oct. 2020
  • Maria Montessori was born in the province of Ancona in 1870, as Italy was unified out of a patchwork of ancient republics and city-states.
    Kathryn Hughes, The New York Review of Books, 16 Feb. 2023
  • The verdict carried a rare Vatican prison sentence in a city-state with only three jail cells.
    Stefano Pitrelli, Washington Post, 23 Jan. 2024
  • The Southeast Asian city-state is also dealing with the sudden downsides of success: namely, an epic surge in housing prices.
    Nathaniel Taplin, wsj.com, 4 May 2023
  • Hansen believes that wastefulness and despoilment sped the collapse of the vast city-states likely controlled by El Mirador.
    Los Angeles Times, 1 Mar. 2023
  • For 11 generations, the Mayan ruler’s dynasty had ruled Copan, a city-state near today’s border between Honduras and Guatemala.
    Gerardo Aldana, The Conversation, 19 June 2024
  • Dozens of boreholes were drilled into the ground at the site, once a pre-Hispanic city-state, revealing layers of artifacts from various societies.
    Brendan Rascius, Miami Herald, 4 Apr. 2024
  • With distinctive landmarks, backdrops and atmosphere, the Asian city-state is the ideal location to create a humorous addition to the Tom and Jerry canon.
    Patrick Frater, Variety, 25 July 2023
  • The history of the Florentine Renaissance can also be told in wars—a continual melee of rival families and city-states—and in the books that were used both to support and to undermine civic freedoms.
    Claudia Roth Pierpont, The New Yorker, 19 Feb. 2024
  • Over the last decade, Singapore, a city-state with a population of five million, has quietly become an important partner in this regard.
    Jude Blanchette, Foreign Affairs, 24 July 2023
  • The game’s purview extends to the downtrodden toiling (and playing, like those youngsters) under the neo-feudal yoke of Shinra, the energy company that doubles as an autocratic city-state.
    Lewis Gordon, Vulture, 22 Feb. 2024
  • Thanks to the conservation measures spearheaded by this enterprising city-state and its dedicated conservationists, the fate of the species is a bit more secure.
    Anne Pinto-Rodrigues, Smithsonian Magazine, 1 Apr. 2024
  • Those efforts include the futuristic city-state Neom, which Prince Mohammed hopes will one day feature flying cars, robot dinosaurs and a giant artificial moon.
    Chelsey Dulaney, WSJ, 9 Jan. 2024
  • And in Singapore, a densely populated city-state with a single landfill, both citizen and government efforts are tackling the problem to stem harm to the environment and human health.
    Cameron Pugh, The Christian Science Monitor, 17 Oct. 2023
  • Almost a century after the agreement, the Hittites' expansive empire splintered into smaller city-states.
    Sean Mowbray, Discover Magazine, 21 Nov. 2023
  • Russia and the West, laid low by these neo-crusades, have disintegrated into small city-states (California and Moscovia are now sovereign nations), and an air of medieval disorder prevails.
    Jennifer Wilson, Harper's Magazine, 11 May 2022
  • Just as an archaeologist carefully excavates a mound to reveal different epochs of a city-state stacked on one another, so can a linguist separate the layers of a language to uncover the stages of its evolution.
    Anvita Abbi, Scientific American, 16 May 2023
  • Madison’s theory of an extended republic was that self-government would work better in a large, diverse nation than in a small city-state (the locus of most prior republics) because no single faction would predominate.
    Daniel Foster, National Review, 30 Nov. 2023
  • Perhaps surprisingly for a city-state like Singapore, manufacturing contributes about 20% of the country’s GDP.
    Lionel Lim, Fortune Asia, 23 May 2024
  • These are the industrial hinterlands of Glendale, a tidy enclave in the rambling city-state that is Los Angeles, and here, among plumbing supply warehouses and an Amazon delivery van lot, sits a squat cinder-block building, an unexpected portal.
    Liz Brown, New York Times, 22 May 2024
  • Meanwhile, the rise of other powerful families in Italy challenged Medici supremacy, and other nearby city-states gained power and further diminished the Medicis’ political leverage.
    Neil Quilliam, Foreign Affairs, 29 Dec. 2023
  • In a meeting of the Baltimore City delegation earlier this month, Scott’s office asked legislators to consider a hybrid city-state appointment model, instead.
    Amanda Yeager, Baltimore Sun, 22 Feb. 2024
  • Concerns are most pronounced in Singapore, a multiracial city-state with a majority ethnic-Chinese population that is increasingly sympathetic to Beijing.
    Washington Post Staff, Washington Post, 21 Sep. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'city-state.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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