Manchuria was only really its own country during WW2, and even then it was a Japanese puppet state, though granted, the Qing dynasty of China was Manchurian...
I'd quibble that Monsoons are seasonal changes, or storms caused by changes in the seasons, but they aren't in themselves seasons, any more than hurricanes are.
The mating season takes part generally in the monsoon season, and I season my wood at this time, which in Australia is in the Summer season and at this time I also season my food with spices I bought during the holiday season.
24/24 4:03 left =) Only one that got me at first was Manchuria, but I typed that mistakenly for the Winnipeg clue instead of Manitoba (and then I typed Manitoba) so that worked out.
Actually it is a pretty good point. The Magna Carta fits much more into History than geography as well. You can't argue that everything slightly related to humanity is human geography, mormons would't count for me, but that is an opinion, not fact.
They only represent a sizeable majority in one geographic region which they settled in after emigrating to in the 19th century. But, neither the clue nor the answer are worded in respect to geography, so I'm inclined to agree.
Hong Kong and Macau are part of a Special Administrative Region ( SAR) of China. It's one of those ambiguous parts of another country (like Greenland, Gibralter, the District of Columbia, Bermuda, etc.) with limited self-control, but definitely part of China.
The Magna Carta is definitely not geography. Yes, I know about human geography and all, but this dates from 1215 and is not even about defining borders at that time.
While I would argue that there is more to human geography than defining borders; and that the Magna Carta made substantial impact on Barons and the way the country operated (though I am not a Medieval specialist in History). It doesn't feel like it belongs in a geography quiz.
Mardi Gras is known in a whole country and in a whole province (France and Quebec), yet the hint is mentionning just a city ... That's what I call virtual difficulty.
I was about to agree with you, but I read up on it and it turns out New Orleans is much more famous for its Mardi Gras celebrations than other areas and cities. Turns out France and Quebec aren't the only other places, Australia, Belgium, Germany, Senegal ( to name a few) all celebrate Mardi Gras, but the Louisiana city is most well known.
Many places (Brazil, the Caribbean islands, as well as those previously mentioned) celebrate Carnival/Carnivale. Mardi Gras (Fat Tuesday) was traditionally the last day of the Carnival when the people ate and drank to their hearts' content for the following day (Ash Wednesday) was the beginning of Lent. During Lent the people were expected to fast and forego culinary pleasures until the Easter Feast.
We don't call it Manchuria anymore. It reminds us of the colonial puppet state era by the Japanese empire. We just call it the Northeast. And the majority there is Han Chinese instead of Manchu people. Being half Manchu I never know a single word of the nearly-extinct Manchu language, which still prospered 120 years ago.
Was watching an interesting YouTube video the other day suggesting that the birthplace of Muhammad and the original holiest city of Islam was actually Petra, not Mecca.
Monsoon means a "seasonal change in wind direction" which although often accompanied by rainy weather is also associated with the dry part of the cycle.
That's why I love this site, learning new things. Off to Uncle Google to find out more about it :-)
Chinese government does not control laws, currency, taxation or borders in Taiwan