The Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard is a visa-free zone. Anyone can live and work on Svalbard regardless of their citizenship.
412
English is the only major European language that does not use diacritics. German (Doppelgänger), French (résumé), Italian (città), Spanish (España), and Portuguese (Português) all use them. Dear nitpickers: words adopted from other languages do not count.
413
There's a tribe in Vanuatu that believes Prince Philip was a divine being. The Duke of Edinburgh was aware of the cult, and even sent an official portrait to the villagers. Unfortunately, Philip died in 2021 having never visited his worshipers.
414
There is an island in a lake on an island in a lake on an island. This geographic curiosity can be found on the Philippine island of Luzon, a few miles south of Manila. In 2007, map nerds have found another "sub-sub-sub-island" in the countless lakes of Canada's Victoria Island.
415
If you ever plan to visit Bhutan, be prepared to pay a hefty bill. Bhutanese authorities charge visitors $200 per day in taxes. Spending one month in Bhutan therefore will cost you $6,000 in taxes alone. Depending on the season and number of fellow travelers, charges per day might even be higher.
Nitpicker here, if I'm not mistaken English does have some old variations of words where a " diacritic is used, (e.g. naïve, coöperate) which indicate that you pronounce the two vowels separately rather than together
However english does not have a variant of "i" or "j" without the tittle so the fact that these letters always use diacritics effectively means it never uses them (for variation).
ä, ö and ü are actually not diacritics, but ligatures. They evolved from ae/oe/ue to a/o/u with the e on top (aͤ), but the e in German handwriting back then looked like two paralel lines and then in print they simplified the lines to dots. Here you can see the old German handwriting small e, (large E) and ä:
The A with umlaut was originally written as AE, partly contracted (Æ / æ). Later an A developed with a small E above it (Aͤ / aͤ). The lower case e was written as two vertical lines in the further development of the Kurrent font, as well as the lower case e above the A. This spelling has been preserved to this day in the cursive script (and in Fraktur script). In the antique print, the overwritten e was stylized to two points.
I think most Russian speakers would disagree with "fact" #412. So would probably anyone else who has any idea of the meaning of "major European language".
What a coincidence that I barely ever scroll through the facts, but now when I do, #414 was about the Philippine recursive island, and just a few minutes prior I randomly remembered the fact and checked on the island for the FIRST TIME IN YEARS on Google Maps. And minutes later I randomly see this fact on JetPunk.
I don't think an Interesting Facts entry should include nitpicker notes. It seems to controvene the tone of the section and looks unprofessional. I think pinned comments are a better place for such addendums, since it better targets the message and allows for more text.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tittle
However english does not have a variant of "i" or "j" without the tittle so the fact that these letters always use diacritics effectively means it never uses them (for variation).
Source: German Wikipedia article on the letter ä, the second paragraph:
The A with umlaut was originally written as AE, partly contracted (Æ / æ). Later an A developed with a small E above it (Aͤ / aͤ). The lower case e was written as two vertical lines in the further development of the Kurrent font, as well as the lower case e above the A. This spelling has been preserved to this day in the cursive script (and in Fraktur script). In the antique print, the overwritten e was stylized to two points.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursive_islands_and_lakes