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Yes a lot of children from towns and cities were evacuated to live with people in the countryside where it was assumed to be safer.they stayed until it was deemed safe to return home
Towns, farms and villages whose distruction had no strategic advantage to the enemy and were therefore less likely to be attacked.
most people in Ireland live small towns in but a majority live in cities most people in Ireland live small towns in but a majority live in cities
children who lived in the cities of Britain were evacuated to the countryside, because German bombers would want to bomb big industrial cities where there are lots of people rather than countryside villages.
19 percent of people live in towns and cities in the UK
because ugly people lived there
Japanese people, as with any other country in the world, live in cities, towns, villages and in the countryside.
Most towns and cities are surrounded by countryside
No, "countryside" is a noun that refers to rural areas outside of cities and towns. It is not an adjective.
"Countryside" is a noun. It refers to a rural area outside of cities and towns.
Urbanization
in your face
Country is all places in the world that people call countries. Countryside is the territory outside of towns and cities, the territory is usually used for hiking.
The beauty, the tranquillity, the more relaxed way of life, a chance to get away from the cities and large towns and many other things attract people to the countryside in the UK.
Yes, "countryside" is a common noun. It refers to rural areas outside of cities or towns.
Most people in Latin America live in towns and cities, with urbanization rates continuing to increase. However, there are still significant populations living in the countryside, particularly in rural areas where agricultural activities are common.
true as in dia is also developing now a days faster than the countryside