----- I live in Ockley village, which is in the postal area of Dorking, We have a parish council which has representatives on the District Council. So the answer to your question is yes.
Boscastle can be called a town, but it can also be called a village, I would say town though. So, YES!
The most accurate and honest answer is to say you live in the Town of Eastchester with Eastchester schools. The area you live in (Eastchester) uses a Scarsdale postal address for mailing purposes, but is not in the Town and Village of Scarsdale, and not in the Scarsdale school district. Government services are provided by Town of Eastchester, not Scarsdale.
He said it in his book, Business at the Speed of Thought
village
a mon village.
medival villagers did because they had more say in their village rules than townsfolk did in the town rules.
Scrooge says he will retire to the town of Blechingley, located in Surrey, England.
le village (masc.)
There was no fixed number of people in a village. A village was defined in terms of features. A village had no permanent market, had one church, and was surrounded by a green zone, which is to say it could not be adjacent to another village. A permanent market or a second church would turn it into a town. Without a church, it was a hamlet. But clearly, a village could exist with a single family, provided it had a church, and could have 1000 people, provided they all went to the same church and did not build a market. A city, by the way, was a town with a cathedral or a charter.
in an old village doesn't say specifically when or where.
I'm not sure exactly what you mean ... if you want to say "What a nice (charming) village!" you could say:Quel beau village!orQuel village charmant!
It is correct to say, 'Luckily, the windstorm did not do any damage to your town'. You just need to put the comma after 'Luckily'.