Description | Letter | City | % Correct |
---|---|---|---|
Capital of Brazil | B | Brasília | 99%
|
Biggest metro area in Brazil | S | São Paulo | 98%
|
Home to the statue of Christ the Redeemer | R | Rio de Janeiro | 97%
|
Biggest city in the Amazon river | M | Manaus | 93%
|
Its name literally means "reef" in portuguese | R | Recife | 90%
|
Former capital of Brazil, 1549-1763 | S | Salvador | 83%
|
Believed to have bordered Lagos, Nigeria, before the continental drift | F | Fortaleza | 82%
|
Most southern capital | P | Porto Alegre | 82%
|
3rd biggest metro area in Brazil | B | Belo Horizonte | 81%
|
Capital with the highest HDI | C | Curitiba | 75%
|
Most northern metro area with more than 1 million people | B | Belém | 74%
|
Closest state capital to the above | G | Goiânia | 63%
|
Its name literally means "big field" in portuguese | C | Campo Grande | 60%
|
Renamed "New Amsterdam" during the dutch invasion in the 17th century | N | Natal | 60%
|
Biggest metro area excluding capitals | C | Campinas | 58%
|
City inside the metro area above, home to the biggest airport in Brazil (GRU) | G | Guarulhos | 49%
|
City where ATP Hall-of-Famer Gustavo Kuerten was born | F | Florianópolis | 45%
|
Home to the second place with most visits by foreigners in Brazil, on the argentinian border | F | Foz do Iguaçu | 43%
|
Smallest metro area to hold a FIFA World Cup match in 2014 | C | Cuiabá | 40%
|
Home to a soccer/football team that lost many players on a plane crash in 2016 | C | Chapecó | 39%
|
Copyright H Brothers Inc, 2008–2024
Contact Us | Go To Top | View Mobile Site