commuter belt - definição. O que é commuter belt. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é commuter belt - definição

ADMINISTRATIVE UNIT OF A DENSE URBAN CORE AND ITS SATELLITE CITIES
Metropolitan Area; Commuter belt; Metropolitan areas; Metro areas; Commuting satellite; Commuter area; Metro area; Metro population; Metropolitan Areas; Metropolitan area (United States); Urban conglomeration; Metropolitan area (Puerto Rico); Metropolitan region; Metropolitan regions
  • A metropolitan area usually includes a main city and a series of smaller satellite cities as can be seen in this map of [[Madrid]]'s metropolitan area (click on the map to enlarge it).
  • The [[Melbourne]] metropolitan area in [[Australia]] seen at night from the [[International Space Station]]
  • Satellite image]] of the [[New York metropolitan area]], the largest metropolitan area in the United States and one of the largest in the world, with [[Long Island]] in the east and [[Manhattan]] in the image's center

commuter belt         
(commuter belts)
A commuter belt is the area surrounding a large city, where many people who work in the city live.
...people who live in the commuter belt around the capital.
N-COUNT
Commuter town         
  • [[Hervanta]] in [[Tampere]], Finland, is mostly known for its residential tower blocks, but there are also some commercial services, a university campus and several high-tech companies.
URBAN COMMUNITY THAT IS PRIMARILY RESIDENTIAL, FROM WHICH MOST OF THE WORKFORCE COMMUTES OUT
Dormitory town; Bedroom communities; Dormitory suburb; Exburb; Exurban growth; Commuter village; Commuter villagre; Dormitory village; Dormitory community; Sleeping districts; Commuter Town; Dormitory settlement; Commuter settlement; Bedroom town; Exurbanization; Bed town; Commuter suburb; Bedroom suburb; Bedroom community; Ex-urb; Commuter city; Dormitory city; Bedroom suburbs; Residential city

A commuter town is a populated area that is primarily residential rather than commercial or industrial. Routine travel from home to work and back is called commuting, which is where the term comes from. A commuter town may be called by many other terms: "bedroom community" (Canada and northeastern US), "bedroom town", "bedroom suburb" (US), "dormitory town", or "dormitory suburb" (Britain/Commonwealth/Ireland). In Japan, a commuter town may be referred to by the wasei-eigo coinage "bed town" (ベッドタウン, beddotaun). The term "exurb" was used from the 1950s, but since 2006, is generally used for areas beyond suburbs and specifically less densely built than the suburbs to which the exurbs' residents commute.

fan belt         
  • right
  • Belt-drive cog on a [[belt-driven bicycle]]
  • Hagley Museum]]
  • A multiple-V-belt drive on an [[air compressor]]
  • A two-stage transmission using spring belts on a toy vehicle
  • Timing belt
  • The drive belt: used to transfer power from the engine's flywheel. Here shown driving a [[threshing machine]].
  • v-belt angle, XPZ & SPZ profile
  • A small section of a wide flat belt made of layers of leather with the fastener on one end, shown in an exhibit at the [[Suffolk Mills]] in [[Lowell, Massachusetts]]
  • Belts on a [[Yanmar 2GM20]] marine [[diesel engine]]
LOOP OF FLEXIBLE MATERIAL USED TO MECHANICALLY LINK ROTATING SHAFTS
Flat belt; Round belt; Vee belt; Belt and rope drive; Belt transmission; Belt drive; V-belt; Fan belt; Flat-belt pulley; Drive belt; Polygroove belt; Fanbelt; Belt-drive; V Belts; V-Belt; V belts
(fan belts)
In a car engine, the fan belt is the belt that drives the fan which keeps the engine cool.
N-COUNT

Wikipédia

Metropolitan area

A metropolitan area or metro is a region that consists of a densely populated urban agglomeration and its surrounding territories sharing industries, commercial areas, transport network, infrastructures and housing. A metro area usually comprises multiple principal cities, jurisdictions and municipalities: neighborhoods, townships, boroughs, cities, towns, exurbs, suburbs, counties, districts, as well as even states and nations like the eurodistricts. As social, economic and political institutions have changed, metropolitan areas have become key economic and political regions.

Metropolitan areas typically include satellite cities, towns and intervening rural areas that are socioeconomically tied to the principal cities or urban core, often measured by commuting patterns. Metropolitan areas are sometimes anchored by one central city such as the Paris metropolitan area (Paris) or Mumbai Metropolitan Region (Mumbai). In other cases metropolitan areas contain multiple centers of equal or close to equal importance especially in the United States, for example the Dallas–Fort Worth metropolitan area has 8 principal cities. The Islamabad–Rawalpindi metropolitan area (Islamabad and Rawalpindi), the Rhine-Ruhr in Germany and the Randstad in the Netherlands are other examples.

In the United States, the concept of metropolitan statistical areas has gained prominence. The area of the Greater Washington metropolitan area is an example of statistically grouping independent cities and county areas from various states to form a larger city because of proximity, history and recent urban convergence. Metropolitan areas may themselves be part of a greater megalopolis. For urban centres located outside metropolitan areas that generate a similar attraction at smaller scale for a region, the concept of a regiopolis and respectively regiopolitan area or regio was introduced by German professors in 2006. In the United States, the term micropolitan statistical area is used.

Exemplos do corpo de texto para commuter belt
1. Although Defra refused to disclose the location of the avian flu case, the commuter belt village came under suspicion.
2. As Dublin sprawls and housing costs balloon, the commuter belt is expanding farther into bucolic County Meath.
3. Heavily used commuter belt routes such as Bedford to London will now cost passengers an extortionate 30.30 rather than 16.
4. The campaign in Cheadle, in the commuter belt of the Greater Manchester conurbation, had been intensely local.
5. Most are from east London, with others from the commuter–belt town of High Wycombe, northwest of the capital.