Difficult to remember and spelling of the word "district" definition also has a somewhat unusual. This word may seem simple for those who know English, French or German well. Since "district" is a late Latin word.
Word definition
District is a designation of an administrative-territorial unit, while in each language this definition refers to districts of different sizes.
The only thing that all languages agree on is that this term cannot designate a territory with a significant size. So, in one country a district is a small area, and in another it is already a district
District in different countries
The definition of "district" is constantly used in the United States of America, in France, Great Britain, Austria, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. In Russia, this word is not so popular, although it was introduced by the decree of Peter I. True, recently it has increasingly begun to flicker in scientific, architectural and other projects, it has even been used in the political sphere.
In Russia, a district is a territorial unit with an administration included inprovince. The definition appeared in Russian in 1719 and was partially written off from the Swedish herat, which at that time included up to a thousand households. In one province of Russia, there were five districts, in which there were one and a half to two thousand households. Each had a head - the zemstvo commissar, with him a clerk and three messengers worked. The definition did not last long, only until 1727, when the districts were renamed counties.
In the United States of America and the UK, this is the name of the constituency - the lowest territorial unit. The only exception is the federal district of Columbia, called the District of Columbia, which includes Washington and all its surroundings.
For France, a district is an outdated, but no less popular, definition of a departmental unit. In all other countries, the word denotes a county or district.
District in culture
The concept of "district" from the popular novel has had a strong impact on youth culture.
It first reached young people with the Hunger Games trilogy. In the state described in the novel, there were 13 districts, and children were forcibly removed from each, who were supposed to perform in a bloody show built on murders. The novel made such a strong impression on the younger generation that now in the culture the district is an analogue of the ghetto, with similar problems, in particular poverty, hunger, high crime rates and police brutality.
In this regard, in colloquial speech, the named wordhas an exclusively negative connotation.
By the way, after the appearance of the trilogy, a lot of shooting games and logic quests called "district" began to appear on the big screens.