Sorry, there is no City in Germany called "the Ruhr". Is more a area with different cities in it like Dortmund, Essen, Duisburg and Bochum. So its not a "city" with over 3 million people.
As I understand an urban aera is ONE city. Like Beijing or Guangzhou which contains parts of other villages in it. But its called Beijing. The Ruhr is a river in Germany and the cities on this river are called Ruhr Aera. Again, there is no single city in Germany which is called "The Ruhr".
But, if you read the caveats, you'll find scambigol clearly stating: Red dots are areas with no "central city". And the Ruhr is a red dot.
The source defines the Ruhr as a whole urban area with no central city, while Beijing and Guangzhou are the central cities of their areas. And considering that the source is a German site (where the Ruhr is), well, they should know more if it counts this way.
I admit that I overread "Red dots are areas with no "central city"".
But I do not understand why this is called in english "The Ruhr". The Ruhr is a river as I stated before. In german its called Ruhrgebiet (Ruhrarea). I never heard somebody say "Die (The) Ruhr" when talking about the Ruhrgebiet and I'm from Germany, so I know more if it counts this way.
Well some cities and areas get their own translations in other languages. Like The Hague (Den Haag) and The Ruhr (Ruhrgebiet). The one I hate the most is "West" Germany.
And to spice it all up Palestine is a sovereign country under Zionist occupation, Taiwan is Chinese Taipei, and Kosovo belongs to Serbia. Oh yeah, and Turkey is in Europe.
Wow. I had the impression that Jerusalem was overflowing with people--- but there's only around 800,000. Also, how did Rotterdam make it, but Amsterdam didn't?
Amsterdam has a bigger city proper, but Rotterdam is part of a larger urban area, containing The Hague (Den Haag), Delft, Schiedam, Vlaardingen, Zoetermeer, and many other municipalities.
76/170 and I feel proud of that. There are just too many Chinese and Indian cities...lol. Hard names. I mean. I tried spelling Ghuangzhou(or whatever) 4 times til I just gave up.
"The Ruhr" is a town? I can have mein mail sent dere? Ya? Nien! Das ist ein Bezirk nicht eine Stadt! Es ist kein "städtisches Gebiet", was auch immer das ist.
His German is very broad English word for word translation in English order. It is very creaky stringing along individual word translations which can have multiple English meanings. „Mein mail sent dere“ just shows he's in between Benny Hill and Google.
I feel smug with 153 first time through. And I'm 48 and my first language is English. I think I'm now supposed to insert lol in lower case letters here somewhere but I don't know what's so funny about my score.
Yes, but it's like the 5th largest city in Rhein-Ruhr ! Cologne, Dusseldorf, Dortmund and Duisburg are all bigger than Essen and also part of Rhein-Ruhr !
I did 119 and I just gave up, then I realized I missed Addis Ababa, Nanning, Ahmedabad and Jaipur :/
Either way, I think I did good, the rest of the cities that I missed (mostly Chinese or African) Ive never heard of them so I guess I did not do that bad.
Im proud of myself on one side, but on the other I still wanna learn more.
But I just dont understand how can people do this at 100%, thats just amazing bruh, how can you remember all those Indian and Chinese names, unless you are... well Indian or Chinese lmfao
Some questionable cities in China here - the area around Shanghai gets a big fuzzy often, but I would say if Wuxi counts as a city then places such as Shenzhen and many other 'cities' in large urban agglomerations should count :)
Could Bhilai be checked? It does not amount to 3 millions by any means, not even adding its urban area with that of relatively close Chattisgarh ´s capital, Raipur, which is in fact larger than Bhilai.
I don't know if this will help anyone else, but something that I have found helps me to remember a lot of the Chinese/Indian cities is to just read a little bit about each of them. Even just a brief, five minute Wikipedia peruse of certain ones I often forgot helped them stick in my mind better!
As I understand an urban aera is ONE city. Like Beijing or Guangzhou which contains parts of other villages in it. But its called Beijing. The Ruhr is a river in Germany and the cities on this river are called Ruhr Aera. Again, there is no single city in Germany which is called "The Ruhr".
The source defines the Ruhr as a whole urban area with no central city, while Beijing and Guangzhou are the central cities of their areas. And considering that the source is a German site (where the Ruhr is), well, they should know more if it counts this way.
But I do not understand why this is called in english "The Ruhr". The Ruhr is a river as I stated before. In german its called Ruhrgebiet (Ruhrarea). I never heard somebody say "Die (The) Ruhr" when talking about the Ruhrgebiet and I'm from Germany, so I know more if it counts this way.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruhr
Either way, I think I did good, the rest of the cities that I missed (mostly Chinese or African) Ive never heard of them so I guess I did not do that bad.
Im proud of myself on one side, but on the other I still wanna learn more.
But I just dont understand how can people do this at 100%, thats just amazing bruh, how can you remember all those Indian and Chinese names, unless you are... well Indian or Chinese lmfao
You need some real Lucknow.
Three easy misses for me: Campinas, Xiamen and Yagon. 132/170
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhilai