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Kiryah

Kiryah is a transliteration that can refer to terms in two Semitic languages, depending on context. In Hebrew, the word kiryah (קריה) means “city” or “urban center.” It appears in toponyms as part of compound place names, most commonly in the form kiryat, as in Kiryat Malakhi or Kiryat Shmona, where the element signals “city of” the following name. In modern usage, the everyday Hebrew term for city is ir (עיר), but kiryah remains a literary or formal designation found in names and historical references.

In Arabic, qaryah (قرية) means “village.” The transliteration kɪryah (among others such as qariya or qaryah) appears

There is no widely recognized international place named simply “Kiryah.” When encountered, the term usually signals

Related terms include Kiryat (קריית), used in Israeli city and neighborhood names, and Qaryah (قرية), used in Arabic

in
English-language
texts
and
maps
as
a
rendering
of
this
word.
It
is
a
widespread
toponymic
element
in
the
Arab
world
and
in
historical
or
colonial-era
records.
Variants
reflect
different
dialects
and
transliteration
schemes.
either
a
Hebrew-language
toponym
or
an
Arabic
toponym
whose
base
meaning
is
“city”
or
“village,”
or
it
functions
as
part
of
a
longer
name
in
either
language.
toponymy
to
denote
villages.