I bet lots of people in chartered cities still have a driveway and use their cars everyday, which I think is the definition of suburban (rural might mean you live so far away you don’t go out just for milk, but make rare trips to stock up).
kirthsays
to get your milk, you’re urban?
dcsurfersays
Otherwise my definition would be wrong, right? And we know that can’t be.
liveandletlivesays
Am I rural or suburban?
joetssays
Middleboro is an interesting combination of the two. So is a lot of Dartmouth and Plymouth.
Woburn? Easthampton?
I bet lots of people in chartered cities still have a driveway and use their cars everyday, which I think is the definition of suburban (rural might mean you live so far away you don’t go out just for milk, but make rare trips to stock up).
to get your milk, you’re urban?
Otherwise my definition would be wrong, right? And we know that can’t be.
Am I rural or suburban?
Middleboro is an interesting combination of the two. So is a lot of Dartmouth and Plymouth.
South Middleboro is urban. If you live north of exit 3 on 495, you live in a suburb.
Unless of course you are a squirrel.
When I moved to Westborough, it was half farm town, half commuting suburb of Worcester. Now the farms are gone and peopel commute to Boston.