U.S. Cities by Letter - H-K - Statistics

General Stats
  • This quiz has been taken 88 times
  • The average score is 20 of 28
Answer Stats
Clue First Letter Answer % Correct
The most populous city in Texas. H Houston
100%
The capital and most populous city of Indiana. I Indianapolis
100%
The capital and most populous city of Hawaii. H Honolulu
97%
The largest and most populous city of Missouri sounds like it belongs to another state. K Kansas City
97%
The government of Florida’s most populous city proper consolidated with the government of Duval County in 1968. It is home to a naval station, a naval air station, and a U.S. Marine Corps command. J Jacksonville
96%
The second most populous city in New Jersey. J Jersey City
91%
The capital and most populous city of Mississippi was named after a man who distinguished himself in the Battle of New Orleans and who later became the seventh U.S. President. J Jackson
90%
The capital of Connecticut shares its name with an insurance company. H Hartford
85%
This Florida city shares its name with a Los Angeles neighborhood where film studios are located. H Hollywood
85%
The third largest city in Tennessee, it is named after the first U.S. Secretary of War, whose name also graces the army installation that is adjacent to the United States Bullion Depository. K Knoxville
85%
The second largest city in Nevada. It shares its name with actress Florence (d. 2016) of The Brady Bunch fame. H Henderson
82%
The most populous city proper in Alabama. The first syllable of its name describes what someone wearing an orange vest probably does in the woods. H Huntsville
82%
Strangely, this Kansas city is a suburb of a Missouri city of the same name. K Kansas City
82%
This Washington city shares its name with Superman’s secret identity. K Kent
78%
The thirteenth most populous city in Texas shares its name with the author of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. I Irving
76%
Home to a campus of the University of California, it is also the headquarters for LA Fitness, In-N-Out Burger, and Taco Bell … among many others. I Irvine
73%
Florida’s sixth largest city is 94% Hispanic, and the only industrial city in the U.S. that continues to grow. Its name has four syllables. The first two are a homophone of a friendly greeting. The second two spell the name of Jacob’s wife in the Christian Bible. H Hialeah
72%
The fifth largest city in Missouri was named in honor of the document that severed political connections between the 13 American colonies and Great Britain. I Independence
72%
The economy of the seventeenth most populous city in Texas is directly dependent on the activities at adjacent Fort Cavazos. The first syllable of the city’s name is a synonym for the verb “murder.” The second (final) syllable is an archaic/poetic contraction of “even” or “evening.” K Killeen
67%
This city, the third largest in Illinois, is named after a French-Canadian explorer who, with the Jesuit missionary Père Jacques Marquette, was the first non-indigenous person to explore and map the Upper Mississippi River. J Joliet
65%
Dependent on the furniture, textile, and bus manufacturing businesses, the ninth most populous city in North Carolina has a two-word name. The first word is an antonym of “low.” The second is how you might pronounce the single non-numeric character when reading aloud the value of pi (approximately 3.14159). H High Point
58%
This Oregon city used to be named East Tualatin Plains, then Columbia, then Hillsborough. Some time after 1850, three letters were dropped from its name. H Hillsboro
56%
A California city and Los Angeles suburb whose land was once divided between two rancho grants. To work out the pronunciation of the city’s name, combine the following.1. The last three letters of any gerund. 2. The one-syllable name for a web-footed sea bird frequently seen at most American beaches. 3. The word that means “the hard fibrous material that forms the main substance of the trunk or branches of a tree or shrub, used for fuel or timber.” I Inglewood
55%
A river of the same name lies entirely within this seventh most populous city of Virginia. The city shares its name with American jazz musician Lionel. H Hampton
51%
There was a time when buying a complete set of encyclopedias for $126 would also get you a free parcel of land in this California coastal city. It shares part of its name with a disease that causes the degeneration of nerves in the brain. H Huntington Beach
47%
This city was named after a squatter who migrated to California during the gold rush. The city (and the squatter) share a name with classic film actress Susan (d. 1975), who appeared in With a Song in My Heart, I’ll Cry Tomorrow, I Want to Live!, and Back Street. H Hayward
29%
This is a tough one. In Greek mythology, the name of this California city can refer to one of the Hesperides (possibly a daughter of Hesperus) or the “western land” we now call Italy. H Hesperia
24%
The meaning of this California city’s name is uncertain. Its name has two words, the second of which is a common word used to describe “a low area of land between hills or mountains.” The first word may be derived from the name of a village that lay on the same site and that was inhabited by the indigenous Serrano people: Hurumpa. J Jurupa Valley
24%
No matching quizzes found
Score Distribution
Percent of People with Each Score
Percentile by Number Answered
Your Score History
You have not taken this quiz