Civic in a sentence as an adjective

It certainly sucks to lose your probation because you tried to do your civic duty.

Rent out a room for a few hours at the local civic center or whatever you have in your neck of the woods.

I doubt we'll ever get rid of it, but that's no reason to give up. Speaking out against it at every opportunity, to me, is a civic duty.

>He wasted valuable city resourcesThere's real civic value here that greatly trumps any sort of tax payer whining.

How can I register my civic will so as to undo this blight?For me, this is the most embarrassing thing about being a United States citizen.

We are now on the cusp of being a police state, but I really hope people won't let that dissuade them from exercising their civic duty to engage the democratic process.

"> [the library] need[s] to become the center of civic engagementWe need a center of civic engagement with both equality and equity of access.

I hate that heavy, dangerous, gas-guzzling honda civic with an over-sensitive brake pedal and enormous, completely pointless blind spots over both shoulders.

Is duration-of-residence a legitimate basis for such strong civic discrimination rooted in law?

A civic-minded hacker that wanted to improve the criminal justice process in the US could make a large dent in the problem by coming up with something that would help the electorate handle judicial elections.

Civic definitions

adjective

of or relating or belonging to a city; "civic center"; "civic problems"

adjective

of or relating to or befitting citizens as individuals; "civil rights"; "civil liberty"; "civic duties"; "civic pride"

See also: civil