Asynchronicity
syn·chro·nic·i·ty (sĭng’krə-nĭs’ĭ-tē, sĭn’-) n.
pl. syn·chro·nic·i·ties
1. The state or fact of being synchronous or simultaneous; synchronism.
2. Coincidence of events that seem to be meaningfully related, conceived in Jungian theory as an explanatory principle on the same order as causality.
a·syn·chro·nism (ā-sĭng’krə-nĭz’əm) n.
Lack of temporal concurrence; absence of synchronism.
a·syn’chro·nous (-nəs) adj., a·syn’chro·nous·ly adv.
chron·ic (krŏn’ĭk) adj.
1. Of long duration; continuing: chronic money problems.
2. Lasting for a long period of time or marked by frequent recurrence, as certain diseases: chronic colitis.
3. Subject to a habit or pattern of behavior for a long time: a chronic liar.
cit·y (sĭt’ē) n.
pl. cit·ies
1. A center of population, commerce, and culture; a town of significant size and importance.
2.
a. An incorporated municipality in the United States with definite boundaries and legal powers set forth in a charter granted by the state.
b. A Canadian municipality of high rank, usually determined by population but varying by province.
c. A large incorporated town in Great Britain, usually the seat of a bishop, with its title conferred by the Crown.
3. The inhabitants of a city considered as a group.
In a city of millions it is easy to feel quite small. On the other hand, in a city of millions it is easy to feel part of something huge. This is the Asynchronic City.
