metropolitan
This term evokes the scale and complexity of a major urban center, encompassing not just the city core but the sprawling residential areas that depend on it. It carries a connotation of sophistication, density, and administrative centralization, often used in planning or sociological contexts to describe the integrated nature of a city and its periphery. In an ecclesiastical context, the word shifts from geography to hierarchy. It describes a specific rank of authority within church governance, where a metropolitan bishop serves as a presiding officer over a province of other bishops.
Meanings
Relating to or characteristic of a large city and its surrounding suburbs.
"The government is implementing a new metropolitan transport strategy to reduce congestion."
Of or relating to a metropolitan bishop or an archbishop in certain Christian churches.
"The metropolitan bishop presided over the regional synod to discuss ecclesiastical law."