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How Are City Suburb City Alike

City, Suburb, or Rural?

Suburb. Because it's like City and Rural together. And I like living in a peaceful but modern neighborhood. And work's just blocks away. The store is just steps away to walk. And you'll live a healthy lifestyle.

Can you put your suburb as your city?

Technically you should put both because the postcode is only used by Australia Post....

As an example there are two suburbs called Newtown , one in Sydney & one in Toowoomba. If you don't differentiate on your address but just put the post code how would anyone really know just by the suburb.

If however you are only sending a letter then you can get away without the city as long as you put the postcode & State.

Do you live in a rural area, the suburbs, or the city?

Well I live in Staten Island, which is the most suburban borough of NYC, so I don't know whether you'd consider the island the suburbs or the city.

BQ: I guess the suburbs, though I also like the city.

-- Rosie ♥

Teens: Do you live in the city or suburb.?

throughout high school, my mom and I rented this illegal apartment in some old lady's house. It was ridiculously cheap, which was why we were there, but it was in a rich suburb (same town as the Soprano's house, and where the majority of that show was filmed, if that gives you any idea haha). So, I was like one of the 5 poor kids in that town growing up in a really rich high school where everyone drove BMWs at 16. It was a weird scenario, and kinda gave me a prejudice against rich people ha (just seeing how snobby and ignorant they can be), but it had it's upsides. For example, my girlfriend was loaded (her parents just gave her their credit cards), so she would always pay for food, fill up my tank when i was low, etc, with no concern for money. haha I guess it had its pros and cons, looking back on it.

What are New York Suburbs like?

That depends - they're not all alike. I live in the state of New Jersey, which is located west of NYC across the Hudson. And New Jersey is a mixed bag - it has crowded towns very close to the city, and far less crowded ones farther away; wealthy towns, poorer ones; towns with a lot to offer in terms of cultural activities/dining/recreation and towns that don't have those things; towns that offer lots of opportunities to get fresh air while others do not, etc. And I'm sure the same holds true for suburbs in Connecticut, upstate New York, Long Island, and elsewhere.

I personally prefer the city, and it’s not even close.Basically it’s a trade off between having way more living space in the suburbs for the same price, versus having instant access to the cultural, social, economic and other opportunities of the city. Living in the suburbs, it tends to be hard to motivate yourself to go experience the city even if it’s reasonably accessible, just because you get so much more wrapped up in your day to day life than you expect to. Moreover, unless you luck out and live in a suburb with incredibly easy access to the city by train, living in a suburb requires you to tack on the expense (and environmental impact) of using a car whenever you want to go anywhere.Unless you have kids and really have good reason to want that extra living space, I don’t see how the benefits of suburbia can possibly outweigh all that hassle.

Where do you live, City, Country, Suburb?

i stay in a city suburb so i'm a 20 minute walk from city.i might want to not in any respect stay contained in the rustic,no shops,cafes,and that i'd ought to pressure to get into the city?no way.i'm a city woman all the way!

I've never lived in the city, but aside from the easy access to restaurants and bookstores, I doubt it would appeal to me. I've spent a few nights in New York City. I couldn't sleep! There was construction and traffic noise all night long! Don't people ever stop honking their horns in NYC?RuralI grew up on a farm. We had animals from time to time too, but it was mostly agriculture.The environment was nice—no traffic noise, lots of fresh air, lots of outdoor spaces to explore—but the work really, really sucked. In the spring and summer, it was constant work. There was stuff that needed to be done in the winter and fall too. While the work wasn't any better, at least it wasn't as hot. But working outside when I'd rather be inside fooling around on a computer was the pits.SuburbsSince becoming a adult, I've mostly lived in the suburbs. I like it, especially when it's far enough away from the freeway to not hear any traffic noise. I normally live close enough to the city to get any shopping done easily, but I'm far enough away to not feel like I'm living in the city center, with all its attendent crime and grime.Unfortunately, in my current location, the city council is doing their best to transform our area into an inner city as fast as possible, so I may have to move again soon.

City all the way.Something about suburbia is off-putting to me. I think it’s the sameness and lack of visual and auditory input. (Too quiet and not enough happening.)It also just has to do with boredom and a feeling of being trapped and isolated. I've always lived in cities but when I was a kid we used to sometimes spend summers in places where you can't walk to anything and there is nothing to do or see. I still don't like driving culture at all and I don't want to live anywhere that requires driving to go anywhere interesting.I could possibly see myself living in a small town or village where pretty much everything is walkable, everyone knows everybody else, where nature is extremely accessible, and a very large city is only a short train ride away. (Many places in the UK and Europe would qualify for that.) I also enjoy spending time in nature, completely isolated from everything. But for me suburbia is the worst of all possible worlds, neither here nor there. Devoid of nature, personality, history, character, and excitement.

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