About

I'm Mike Pope. I live in the Seattle area. I've been a technical writer and editor for over 35 years. I'm interested in software, language, music, movies, books, motorcycles, travel, and ... well, lots of stuff.

Read more ...

Blog Search


(Supports AND)

Feed

Subscribe to the RSS feed for this blog.

See this post for info on full versus truncated feeds.

Quote

When doing botanical work in South America, steer clear of the monkeys: They will throw sticks at you with surprising accuracy.

— Botanist, Tricks of the Trade



Navigation





<April 2025>
SMTWTFS
303112345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930123
45678910

Categories

  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  
  RSS  

Contact Me

Email me

Blog Statistics

Dates
First entry - 6/27/2003
Most recent entry - 4/4/2025

Totals
Posts - 2656
Comments - 2678
Hits - 2,736,575

Averages
Entries/day - 0.33
Comments/entry - 1.01
Hits/day - 344

Updated every 30 minutes. Last: 5:57 PM Pacific


  01:53 PM

Last week my Spanish teacher sent me a query about continents, which led me to ask among my non-US-raised colleagues what they'd been taught about continents. How many and which? These are the replies I got back:
  • (Ghana) We were thought in school in Ghana that there are seven continents: Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, South America.
  • (India) I remember learning that there are 7 Continents.
  • (India) 7 - Asia, Europe, Africa, Australia, Antarctica, N.America, S.America. I've never heard or known otherwise, so I'm curious about what the cultural differences are....
  • (Canada) I grew up in Canada, and in our geography classes we were taught that the continents are: Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, South America. Even as a child though I was never satisfied with this. Asia and Europe seem to be the same land mass to me.
  • (China) Europe-Asian, North American, South American, North Pole, Africa, and South Pole.
  • (Germany) "Europa, Asien, Afrika, Australien und Amerika!" It even rhymes in German ... :-)
  • (Italy) 5 continents (the rings in the Olympic flag). Ciao :-)
  • (France) Europe, North and South Americas, Asia and Africa. A few teachers consider Europe and Asia as one continent, Eurasia, and some others add Oceania.
  • (France) It was 5 in France. The America’s were one, and we didn’t count Antarctica. We used the name Oceania for Australia and its smaller neighbors. I always found it random that Europe and Asia were counted separately...
  • (Morocco) 5 - That what I studied all my life. And that why we have five circles in the olympic games symbol.
Interesting, eh? One difference is in whether N and S America are considered separate continents. In Spanish-speaking countries they are not; elsewhere they are. Antarctica and Australia seem to be wildcards. As several people noted, separating Europe and Asia is arbitrary, which I think perfectly illustrates how the definition of "continent" is political, not necessarily geographical. There are further interesting questions to explore here about why some countries like five and others like seven; such a distinction seems to suggest something about history. Something for another time, perhaps.

[categories]  

[3] |