Village?

Beverly Flanigan flanigan at OHIO.EDU
Mon Apr 10 21:41:17 UTC 2006


At 03:24 PM 4/10/2006, you wrote:
> From New England, I speak.
>>
>>At 4/10/2006 11:29 AM, Joanne wrote:
>>>I believe that Danvers, Massachusetts was once called Salem
>>>Village -- the Salem of the witch trials (not to be confused with the
>>>modern-day city of Salem, MA).
>>
>>True.  And Paul Johnston wrote:
>>>If I am not mistaken, in New England, the TOWNS are incorporated,
>>>the villages are not, though they are referred to as villages
>>>(unless they're cities).
>>
>>True of towns.   In political terms (I believe), towns have town
>>meetings, either of all voters or of elected representatives, and are
>>governed by selectmen (a good old word, invented by the
>>Puritans);  cities have mayors and councils.
>>
>>I don't know about incorporation of villages; I think of them as
>>localities, like Brookline Village (this one is definitely not more
>>rural than the town it is in).
>>
>>And "Under a spreading chestnut-tree / The village smithy stands" was
>>written of a quite central location in Cambridge, about two blocks
>>from both the Common and Harvard Square.
>
>....and if we don't have village smithies at this point, we still have
>village idiots, not to mention allusions to idiots in search of a
>village.  Nevertheless, and regardless of issues of incorporation one
>way or the other, I continue to maintain (with Bolinger) that "He
>comes from a village in Kansas" seems odd in a way that "He comes
>from a village in Yorkshire/Saxony/Asturia" don't.  Not impossible,
>though: I just tried googling and came up with
>
>Of course, there'sa village in Kansas that is the proud home of the
>world's largest ball of twine, but this really was something new.
>
>L
>
>------------------------------------------------------------

I think, with others, that the _use_ of "village" in ordinary parlance may
be regional.  If I can sweep northward from Kansas to Minnesota, we had
political entities called "villages," but locals would generally speak of
"going into town," or "living in town" as opposed to the country, etc.

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