Cities are towns
I am a city person, a citizen is an inhabitant of a town, the city has standard norms, so rules and regulations must follow as a charter exist. A city is a town of significant size or an urban area with self-government. Today, cities across the world are managing a dual life; they are cultural, architectural, economic and scientific centers which attract such as in the domains of fashion, art and ideas. Manchester city football club is an English football club based in Manchester that competes in the Premier League, the top flight of Football
A city can be described as a permanent and densely populated area where people settled with administrative boundaries defined and whose members work primarily on non-agricultural tasks. Cities generally have extensive systems of housing, transportation, sanitation, utilities, land use, production of goods and communication. The financial and commercial center of London is an example of a city, just as New York, Singapore, Johannesburg
The city life model is focused on the principals of customer respect, best practice and high value-offerings that are changing the residential experience across cultures; however history marks that more than half of the world’s people live in a town or city instead of the countryside. Cities in fact function like complex organisms; they are not self sustaining, but need efficient systems to bring in food and water, while removing trash and sewage. Cities today require communication lines and sources of power, like imported coal, a nearby hydro-electric dam.
Catholicity
I am a micro-catholic and the word in itself means much to me, welcome to my world where food does not spoil and souls do not perish. Catholicity means broad-minded, liberality, universality, even though many capitalize it as a character of being in conformity with a catholic church, Christians have different interpretations of symbols such as the cross, the scapula, the rosary, a wide range of interest, tastes and comprehensiveness; at this point we come to the dividing line which has been drawn showing different conceptions of catholicity.