Aren't the boroughs of Brooklyn and Staten Island known as Kings and Richmond (technically)? I'm quite happy to be wrong, just thought I'd raise the point.
Yep, New York's SoHo's name derives from South of Houston (that's House-ton, not Hew-ston, and definitely not Ewe-ston like the city in Texas). London's Soho (no capital H) is thought to have come from a rally cheer or hunting cry.
We're fond of doing that in NY. You also sometimes here Noho (for the section North of Houston (heading into Greenwich Village). There's Nolita mentioned here (NOrth of Little ITAly);Tribeca, which is the TRIangle BElow CAnal Street; DUMBO, which stands for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass.
Although the London neighborhood is older and very well known, the New York neighborhood is not named after it as you might expect. It is indeed an abbreviation for South of Houston.
Plattitude is also right about the pronunciation of the street. It is named after William Houston of Georgia, not Sam Houston of Texas. Two different men with two different names that just happen to be spelled the same.
I was the one to show to my mom last year exactly where Flushing Meadows was in the NY area - she's a huge tennis fan - and yet today I could't remember the name. I bet SHE would, even though I'm supposed to be the geography nerd. Lol.
The George Washington Bridge is VERY commonly referred to simply as the GWB. If JFK is acceptable for Kennedy Airport, then you should consider also accepting simply GWB for the Bridge.
Great quiz! But a couple of little things. In the box, it'd be great to write "The Bronx" instead of "Bronx." Also, the official name is Rikers Island with no apostrophe. Finally, it'd be great to accept GWB for the George Washington Bridge.
Also... if the boroughs are listed in order of best to least, it should be Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Staten Island. The current order is close but Queens and the Bronx need to be switched. =D
It is NOT the Bronx, it is Bronx! The name is derived from the Broncks, a family who lived there. the "the" became a misnomer for the borough when people would say, "we are going to visit the Broncks (family)
No. Richmond is the county. Staten Island is the borough. More importantly, no New Yorker anywhere, ever, would say they're going to Richmond County. Nobody goes to Kings County. You go to Staten Island and you go to Brooklyn. Anyone who knows Richmond County surely knows Staten Island. I don't understand why people insist on these "can you accept [ridiculously obscure variation on answer everyone knows]" requests as though they're genuine requests when they're really just an effort to show off how much you know.
Yeah-it's Queens and Brooklyn that are Burroughs of NYC, not Suffolk and Nassau. Those are New York State counties. Not incorporated in the City.
On a separate note: could you consider allowing some commonly used abbreviations for some of these? I was very surprised that I had to write out "George Washington". I usually call it the GWB.
Queens and Brooklyn may be boroughs of NYC, but they are located on Long island, just as Nassau and Suffolk Counties are. Like we always do, for some unknown reason, we've separated the two latter counties from Brooklyn and Queens. Proof positive: You can go from either Brooklyn or Queens to Nassau and Suffolk without crossing any bridge; it is one landmass.
arggg Columbia! I always forget that one. I try NYC and Julliard every time (Julliard has never been an answer on these quizzes, but I keep trying just in case)
SoHo
Soho
Plattitude is also right about the pronunciation of the street. It is named after William Houston of Georgia, not Sam Houston of Texas. Two different men with two different names that just happen to be spelled the same.
Also... if the boroughs are listed in order of best to least, it should be Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Staten Island. The current order is close but Queens and the Bronx need to be switched. =D
On a separate note: could you consider allowing some commonly used abbreviations for some of these? I was very surprised that I had to write out "George Washington". I usually call it the GWB.