How would a stranger know if you have seen an atlas or not.
What youa re describing are two things:
1 - Someone giving you the actual coordinates of where they are from. If they are from New Jersey, there is a very good chance they will mention what exit they are from (8 in my case). You should always ask what exit someone from New Jersey is from.
2 - Probably said with pride related not only to their City, but also their State.
BTW, do you know what state Kansas City is in? No peeking!
A former Bishop of Syracuse NY used to get a kick out of the idea that he could celebrate at the high altar of St. Peter’s, Rome, whenever he felt like it.
I looked at that after I posted it and knew it was wrong, but was too tired to actually sit and think about why it was wrong and what to do to correct it.
Ontario International Airport is in California, not far from Los Angeles. In fact, the city of Los Angeles owns it; they bought if from the city of Ontario some years ago.
I suspect that the “New York, New York” situation arose from the opposite direction than that proposed by the OP. If one says, “I’m from New York,” the first question is liable to be, “The city? Albany?, Buffalo?” In other words, simply saying “New York” can leave the impression that one has only identified the state and not the city. By noting both, the situation is resolved with a single statement.
This does not address references to “Houston, Texas” or similar declarations. I’ve never actually heard anyone say “Chicago, Illinois” or Los Angeles, California" in casual conversation, and Dallas, Fort Worth, and Austin do not tend to get the state appended, so I am not sure of the origin of “Houston, Texas” although I have heard it expressed that way.
I wonder if there was a time when Houston was small enough to not be recognized by everyone and the state was appended for clarity, then entered the language as simply a habit?
My own *guess *for such statements would be that the city/state combinations have appeared in songs or movie quotes and have simply entered the language as people grab the terms from memory. I don’t recall anyone ever talking about “Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,” but I have heard folks mention “Philadelphia, PA” (with the P and A spoken as words), and that phrase appears in a couple of different songs.
Clearly, you aren’t a sports fan. The Burlington International Games “invit[es] more than 25 North American cities, towns and communities named Burlington to participate”.
Burlington, Vermont has hosted these games in the past. Not to be confused with Burlington, Massachusetts.
How did they move it all the way from Canada to Los Angeles? Seems like a lot of trouble just for an airport, considering they already have LAX. Is it still called YYZ?
ETA: i just reread your post and see you ruined my joke by saying “city of Ontario”.
I’ve never noticed Texans in Texas including the state name when they mention their origins. If anything, they’ll omit it since they figure everybody else is from Texas as well and should know the name of all towns and cities in the state.
I don’t think it can be because Americans include the state as well as the city in mailing addresses - British people do that too. Even London usually requires a county on drop down forms, and the county is Greater London, which includes nothing but London. It’s becoming more common to just write the town and postcode, but it’s not standard form.
However, I understand the explanations about the sheer number of similarly-named towns making it a habit for people to add the state even when talking about famous cities. That, and being overly-helpful to foreigners. There probably are some people in the UK who wouldn’t know where Houston is when talking to an American, but that city’s well-known enough that any adult who isn’t aware Houston’s in Texas probably doesn’t care to know either. Still, it is hard to know when to draw the line between helpful and being patronising.
BTW, why are people telling the OP that there’s a Paris in France? I would have thought it was pretty clear he was asking if there were others in the US.
I think it’s mentioned in quite a few movies and TV shows; it might be the location of a particular famous show, too, but the computer I’m currently on is completely borked and I can’t run a search.
Coincidentally, the year we moved to San Antonio, Texas, we sent our female American Hairless Terrier (AHT) to her original breeder in San Antonio, Florida.