in-state
adjective[before noun]
USrelatingto things orpeoplethatlive,happen, areproduced, etc. within aparticularstate:
Inordertoqualifyfor in-statetuition,studentsarerequiredtoprovideproofofcitizenship.
Californiamandatedthe firstinventoryof in-stategreenhousegasemissionsin 1998.
Compare
out-of-stateadjectiveUS
- Almost 70% of thestudentsat theuniversitywereregisteredas in-stateresidents.
- These arefirmswithsmallproductionfacilitiesbut many in-statecustomers.
- Such ataxwould be non-discriminatory between in-state and out-of-stateenergyproducers.
- Thatyear, theaveragecostfor a 4-year,publicin-statecollegewas $15,389; theaveragepricefor a 4-yearpublic, out-of-statecollegewas $26,944.
Towns & regions: parts of countries
- bicoastal
- Breton
- city state
- collectorate
- county borough
- countywide
- district
- green belt
- metropolitan county
- multi-county
- non-county
- non-metropolitan county
- northwest
- out-of-state
- province
- provincial
- regionalism
- sector
- southerner
- upstate
in-state
adverb
USwithin aparticularstate:
How many of thestudentslivein-state?
Compare
out-of-stateadverbUS
- Thesamplewaslimitedtomotherswho were Arkansasresidentsand gavebirthin-state.
- Thefiguresconcerngoodsconsumedin-state.
Towns & regions: parts of countries
- bicoastal
- Breton
- city state
- collectorate
- county borough
- countywide
- district
- green belt
- metropolitan county
- multi-county
- non-county
- non-metropolitan county
- northwest
- out-of-state
- province
- provincial
- regionalism
- sector
- southerner
- upstate