From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishlocalitylo‧cal‧i‧ty /ləʊˈkæləti $ loʊ-/ noun (plural localities) [countable] formalAREAa small area of a country, city etcSYN area
weather reports from several different localitiesin the locality
Both sea fishing and freshwater angling are available in the locality.Examples from the Corpuslocality• The city council is responsible for providing police protection in each locality.• Assume that R is a high-income locality and S is a low-income locality.• It is a major finding that the socio-demographic profiles of individuallocalities have become increasingly distinctive.• All are of singlebirds - 10 seen at the coast and eight in inlandlocalities.• Main classes are based upon a division of localities into continents.• Censustakers then turn the difference into a mathematicalformula and apply it to the overalllocality.• Maybe you have read of gold being found in a particular locality, but now you can see it.• Police officers are generally expected to live in the same locality in which they work.• In some localities the price of housing has risen by more than fifty percent in the last decade.• They are also regular at most suitablelocalities along the coast.in the locality• The presentation of a pair of binoculars will help in pursuit of his hobby of aeroplanespotting at numerousairfieldsin the locality.• Agronomists were much in evidencein the localities in the spring of 1922.• Llandudno had merely assisted with funding his flight to this country and helped to get him a job in the locality.• It arose out of genuine social issues, not because there was a disproportionate number of prejudicedpersonalities living in the locality.• This provided the power for the only millin the locality, StokeOrchard Mill.• If a woman brewed a better beer than her neighbours her house became the favoured one in the locality - the local.• We chose Bedford as it was almost the only place in the locality where hotelaccommodation was available.