Eh, I’ve just never really seen the difference unless you put about 30 miles of desert (or other local topography) between them. It just doesn’t feel like you’re going from town to town or city to city to me.
Call me crazy, but the geography of the Niagara Falls doesn’t figure into my thoughts very often. I blame living on the opposite side of the planet and having better things to do with my life.
Do you see how your comment is a non sequitur to Mika’s?
O.K., Crawlspace, so Wikipedia gives two different values for the population density of Manhattan, one in the article about Manhattan (that you have cited) and another in the article about the most densely populated cities in the world (that I have cited). Which is correct? Also, what other cities of the world also have a considerably greater population during the day when they are filled with commuters and tourists, and how does Manhattan’s population density compare with them?
What, to work in the vintage store basement sweatshops, laundering and ironing? I would get a better price for their old duds - too many moms, not enough retro outfits!
So, how far do you have to travel from Manhattan to get to a Sears store to buy a gingham dress? And how long does it take you to drive that distance?
And there used to be a Russia, though now the original village site, I believe, is part of a reservoir. My grandfather was born there in 1880.
I grew up in New York, 20 minutes from Canada, by Niagara Falls. We would to Canada on a whim for shopping, meals and to buy cheap gas, in the 1980s.
There was a time in the 80s when gas was cheaper in Canada? As of the early 90s, it was about twice as expensive as in the US.
Russia is still there, northwest of Poland.
There’s also a Sweden, New York. Ironically, it’s a couple hundred miles away from Stockholm, New York.
I’m American, and I don’t at all understand what you just said. Aren’t there just counties, then incorporated towns? How do you have a village within a town within a county?
Not far at all, There is a Sears store right inside Manhattan, on Varick street. Also one in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn.
As for a gingham dress, if Sears still carries it, than any Sears store should be able to get it for you.
In New York, counties are filled with towns and cities. Towns may additionally have villages within them. Villages provide a third layer of municipal government where more localized services can be provided.
In your state, maybe. It differs from state to state. Some states have townships below the the county level for unincorporated areas.
From the wiki article on “village”:
Bolding mine.
Which makes Central Park with its 800+ acres all the more remarkable what with land being at such a premium.
I grew up in the State of New York, Erie County, Town of Amherst, Village of Williasmsville. Our village had 4 elementary schools, 3 middle schools and 3 high schools, so it wasn’t some little area.
This is why this really isn’t an issue that a non-American needs to understand at all. In Ohio, the only possible combinations are:
- A Township, B County
- A (City or Village, but not both), B Township, C County
- A (City or Village, but not both), C County
To someone at the level of the OP and other non-Americans, this isn’t an issue at all. If you don’t know the difference between the State of New York, the City of New York, and the City of Newark, New Jersey, then where the Jets and the Giants’ home field is located is way beyond any relevant level of detail.
It’s probably best if you just try to forget New Jersey.
Agreed, but folks who aren’t from the area tend to think of the other boroughs as minor suburbs of Manhattan. Most are probably surprised to learn there are 7.5 million people living on Long Island.