I think the difference is that there isn’t technically an accessible “inside” to structures; you go to the Eiffel Tower/Washington Monument to see the structures, but you’d go to a house/library to do things inside them.
(And, before people try and “well ackchyually” me, yes, I know there are lifts and a viewing platform at the Eiffel Tower, but they’re more taking advantage of the tower’s shape rather than any actual interior space. If you removed the floor there, everyone would fall to the ground.)
(And the tiny room in the very top does not count, either; a single minuscule living space does not offset all the other lack of such.)
"The Warsaw Radio Mast was a radio mast located near Gąbin, Poland, and was the world's tallest structure at 2,120 ft (646.38 m) from 1974 until its collapse on 8 August 1991. The mast was designed for extreme height in order to broadcast Soviet propaganda around the world, including to the remotest areas such as Antarctica."
The Great Pyramid of Giza, in the urban area of Cairo (capital), was surpassed 1st by the Lincoln Cathedral (not in a capital), then the Washington Monument in Washington DC (capital), then the Eiffel Tower in Paris (capital), then the Chrysler and Empire State buildings in New York (not currently a capital), but I don't think QM is counting most of those as "buildings" including the pyramids.
There are definitions of building that would put Washington DC (Washington Monument), Paris (Eiffel Tower), and Jerusalem (2nd Temple) on the list of capitals that were at times home to the world's tallest building. And maybe Istanbul for the Hagia Sofia if Istanbul were still a capital? Would have to look it up.
I know QM addressed this partially already, but, there are conflicting definitions of what a building is...
Why is Valletta not correct for the capital but 'not of the biggest 5 cities in the country' one? It's number 7 per https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_Malta
I'd like to suggest Ngerulmud as an answer for the "capital not one of the five biggest cities".
Palau, of course, doesn't really have cities, but it does have at least 5 towns. Ngerulmud, I've mentioned elsewhere, is just a hill with a population of zero. So I would say it's definitely not one of the five biggest cities (of which there are none) or even towns.
Then again maybe this is a bit too esoteric. Just a thought.
That would be awkward talking with a geography nerd, and you don't know geography, imagine being like: "Hi, what's your name?" "Kingston." "Like the capital of Jamaica?" "No, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines." "Yeah ur wrong lol u don't know where your name comes from"
Why does the last question not accept "Paris" as a response? When the Eiffel tower was unveiled it was the tallest building in the world meaning at one point Paris had the tallest building in the world
What makes a person an emperor? Pretty sure leaders in Beijing, Moscow, and Pyongyang all resemble historic emperors more than the current one in Japan.
But great quiz!
(And, before people try and “well ackchyually” me, yes, I know there are lifts and a viewing platform at the Eiffel Tower, but they’re more taking advantage of the tower’s shape rather than any actual interior space. If you removed the floor there, everyone would fall to the ground.)
(And the tiny room in the very top does not count, either; a single minuscule living space does not offset all the other lack of such.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warsaw_radio_mast
"The Warsaw Radio Mast was a radio mast located near Gąbin, Poland, and was the world's tallest structure at 2,120 ft (646.38 m) from 1974 until its collapse on 8 August 1991. The mast was designed for extreme height in order to broadcast Soviet propaganda around the world, including to the remotest areas such as Antarctica."
I know QM addressed this partially already, but, there are conflicting definitions of what a building is...
I'd like to suggest Ngerulmud as an answer for the "capital not one of the five biggest cities".
Palau, of course, doesn't really have cities, but it does have at least 5 towns. Ngerulmud, I've mentioned elsewhere, is just a hill with a population of zero. So I would say it's definitely not one of the five biggest cities (of which there are none) or even towns.
Then again maybe this is a bit too esoteric. Just a thought.
Also Vienna for Franz Joseph
Remembered Victoria right at the last 10 seconds.