Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why
town
noun
Originally, a walled or fortified place; a collection of houses inclosed with walls, hedges or pickets for safety. Rahab’s house was on the town wall. Joshua 2:75. A town that hath gates and bars. 7 Samuel 23:7.
town
Any collection of houses, larger than a village. In this use the word is very indefinite, and a town may consist of twenty houses, or of twenty thousand.
town
In England, any number of houses to which belongs a regular market, and which is not a city or the see of a bishop. A town, in modern times, is generally without walls, which is the circumstance that usually distinguishes it from a city. In the United States, the circumstance that distinguishes a town from a city, is generally that a city is incorporated with special privileges, and a town is not. But a city is often called a town.
town
The inhabitants of a town. The town voted to send two representatives to the legislature, or they voted to lay a tax for repairing the highways.
town
In popular usage, in America, a township; the whole territory within certain limits.
town
In England, the court end of London.
town
The inhabitants of the metropolis.
town
The metropolis. The gentleman lives in town in winter; in summer he lives in the country. The same form of expression is used in regard to other populous towns.