The word 'suburban' entered English in the early seventeenth century from Latin 'suburbānus' (near the city, belonging to the outskirts), from 'sub-' (near, close to, under) and 'urbs' (city). The related noun 'suburb' had entered English even earlier, in the fourteenth century, from Old French 'suburbe,' from Latin 'suburbium' (the area near a city, an outlying district). A suburb is literally the zone 'sub' (near, adjacent to) the 'urbs' (city) — not quite inside it, not quite outside it, but in its shadow.
The Latin prefix 'sub-' in this word means 'near' or 'close to' rather than its more common sense of 'under' or 'below.' This spatial sense appears in other Latin compounds: 'subalpine' (near the Alps), 'sublittoral' (near the shore). The suburb is defined by proximity to the city — it exists in relation to the urban center, dependent on it for employment, commerce, and cultural life, but separate from it in density and character.
Suburbs existed in the ancient world. Rome's 'suburbium' included areas outside the Servian and later Aurelian walls where activities banned from the city center took place: certain industries, cemeteries, and large estates. Martial and Juvenal wrote about suburban villas. Medieval London had suburbs beyond its walls — Southwark, for instance, which was technically in Surrey but
The modern suburb, however, is a product of industrialization and transportation technology. The nineteenth-century development of railways, omnibuses, and later streetcars made it possible for workers to live miles from their workplaces. The London suburbs expanded massively along railway lines in the Victorian era. American suburbs exploded after World War II, driven by automobile
The word 'suburban' has accumulated cultural connotations that go well beyond geography. In much twentieth-century literature and criticism, 'suburban' implied conformity, mediocrity, cultural sterility, and a retreat from authentic urban or rural life. John Cheever's fiction explored the hidden tensions beneath suburban surfaces. The phrase 'suburban sprawl' became shorthand for environmentally and aesthetically destructive development patterns.
Yet suburbs are where the majority of Americans now live, and the word has also been reclaimed and revalued. Suburban diversity — ethnic, economic, and architectural — challenges the old stereotypes of white picket fences and homogeneity. 'Suburban' increasingly names not a single lifestyle but a spectrum of communities that share proximity to urban centers without sharing much else.
The word family includes 'suburbia' (suburban areas collectively, often with a faintly pejorative connotation), 'suburbanize' (to make suburban), 'suburbanization' (the process), and 'suburbanite' (a resident of a suburb). 'Exurban' (from Latin 'ex-,' out of, beyond + 'urbs') describes areas beyond the suburbs — the rural-suburban fringe. The German calque 'Vorstadt' (fore-city) captures the same spatial concept using native Germanic elements.