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 Questions 'n' Answers about 'Country' Opens New Window.

Q.country!!!??Related Search:
Parenting
 my mother is thinking about moving to the country! i don't want to move to the country because there's nothing to do there! that's really boring! i'm a city person! what is there to do for fun in the country? what are the advantages? what are the disadvantages?? yes but i do not like quiet places. i'm 14. and yes i do know that i don't like quiet places because my grandma lives in the country and it's really quiet and i hate it! it freaks me out!
A.advantages?? less pollution less traffic if any less noise smaller community less likely to get a party busted by the cops? disadvantages? too far from things you might consider fun in the city..idk..concerts? a variety of restaurants, movie theaters, more diverse people, better schools, easy transportation such as buses,trains.. pretty much depends on where you move compare to where you're moving from. overall i think there's more advantages and more things to do in the city. -you might wanna do a little more research to where you're moving, do a pro and cons list and show it to your mom maybe you can change her mind. -find a relative who's willing to take you in, or a friend if not, and you're under 18 or still in school, im afraid you can't do much but having to go with her.
  

Q.Country???Related Search:
Polls & Surveys
 what country are you in atm? what country were you born in? USA, USA!!
A.Born and raised and in Canada now
  

Q.What country has an abundant amount of a resource and then trades it to other countries overpriced?Related Search:
Economics
 What country has a large amount of a resource that is essential (for example gas, coal, oil) and then trades it to other countries for a lot of money? Please say the countries (:
A.Any country that is a member of OPEC.
  

Q.What countries accept military officers from another country?Related Search:
Military
 I am from a country in the European Union, I want to join the army, but not as a soldier, I want to go into an Academy or something so I would start as a officer(slt). What countries accept enrolling from another countries?
A.Jordan
  

Q.What country is best for expanding globally considering their political economy & international trade?Related Search:
Small Business
 I have to write a CPA (country portfolio analysis) report on the country of my choice from Europe, Asia, Africa or South America. I have to explore the possibility of doing business in another country. I don't want anyone to write the report for me i just want to get off on the right start but please some reasons why you chose the country you did. (the business is a clothing store)
A.South Africa, for the following reasons: -Corporate tax rates recently cut to 28% by Finance minister, -Growing middle class, and robust consumer spending -Relative dollar cost to run the business would much lower than in Europe though possibly not as low as Asia. -Although listed as an emerging market - increasing the perception of risk attached to investing - South Africa's growth is comparable to Australia in the last 3 yrs -Burgeoning international fashion destination particularly out of the coastal city of Cape Town which undoubtedly the design & art capital of South Africa (not to mention the world-class wine farms & beaches) for more info on South Africa and doing business there use this website to launch your research efforts [Link] / for more info on current clothing retailers in South Africa see [Link]  [Link]  and lastly for some business press try these online newspapers and business sources: [Link]  [Link] 
  

Q.If you were living in an Underdeveloped Country, What can you do to support the country?Related Search:
Community Service
 Every day, in TV, Radio, Internet, Newspapers, etc, Many things were said about Poverty in the Underdeveloped Countries of the World, Supposing you are one of those living in these type of Countries, and you have Knowledge about the other Developed Countries, meaning you are educated, What will you do to support your country to become a developed Country, or What type of Advise can you give to the Citizens of these types of Countries to Support their Nation and become a Developed Country?
A.This is a very difficult situation and I am afraid can not be answered simply. However, there are many things you can do to help, starting with a small community. You can for instance, teach people to grow a variety of fruit and vegetables to trade with each other and provide sustenance for their own community. Educate the women in various trades like sewing,crocheting, spinning woolinto yarn, knitting, rug making, basket weaving so that they can make their own clothing and blankets and sell the rest to the outsiders. Teach the men in the group the proper care of animals like cows, chickens, and goats which can not only help them in the fields but will also provide milk, eggs and cheese for their diets. There are various trades that would be beneficial to learn as well like carpentry, blacksmith trades etc... Educate the children the basics of reading and writing so that they may be able to make it in the world if circumstances would dictate it. Teach them the importance of caring for the environment by encouring every individual to plant trees (particularly fruit bearing ones)not only to replenish the ones that are cut down, but also to serve as a food source. Most importantly, implement some sort of family planning so that unwanted lives are eliminated and the problems brought on by poverty are diminished. These are just some starters. With your big heart and continuous effort, much of their needs will at least be met.
  

Q.What country will pay for your health care costs if you get sick when travelling?Related Search:
Health & Safety
 My parents live in Canada. They were planning on going to Florida for the winter. Recently, my Dad, who has peripheral artery disease had his medication changed. They won't be travelling to the States now or for the next six months since he can't get insurance because of the change of medicine. Is there a country that you can go to and have free health care if something happens. They couldn't pay for anything serious. I know it is probably unfair to burdon another country to pay for his possible health care problems, but I am worried that if they don't get away, my Dad will not do any walking at all, which he needs to do to stay healthy. They live out in the country and it's really not good to walk on the road in the winter. And a gym is 1/2 an hour a way, even if they would go. A treadmill was already tried and unsuccessful. Thanks if you have any help.
A.Nope. None. It is too much of a problem. Such a country would be attracting all the sick people from around the world who would all flock there. And that's how travel insurance generally is too. It will cover you for any new illness or accidents you have while on vacations, but they never cover preexisting conditions.
  
 Dictionary Opens New Window.
5 definitions found for Country:

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

Country \Coun"try\ (k?n"tr?), n.; pl. Countries (-tr?z). [F.
   contr['e]e, LL. contrata, fr. L. contra over against, on the
   opposite side. Cf. Counter, adv., Contra.]
   1. A tract of land; a region; the territory of an independent
      nation; (as distinguished from any other region, and with
      a personal pronoun) the region of one's birth, permanent
      residence, or citizenship.
      [1913 Webster]

            Return unto thy country, and to thy kindred. --Gen.
                                                  xxxxii. 9.
      [1913 Webster]

            I might have learned this by my last exile,
            that change of countries cannot change my state.
                                                  --Stirling.
      [1913 Webster]

            Many a famous realm
            And country, whereof here needs no account --Milton.
      [1913 Webster]

   2. Rural regions, as opposed to a city or town.
      [1913 Webster]

            As they walked, on their way into the country.
                                                  --Mark xvi. 12
                                                  (Rev. Ver. ).
      [1913 Webster]

            God made the covatry, and man made the town.
                                                  --Cowper.
      [1913 Webster]

            Only very great men were in the habit of dividing
            the year between town and country.    --Macaulay.
      [1913 Webster]

   3. The inhabitants or people of a state or a region; the
      populace; the public. Hence:
      (a) One's constituents.
      (b) The whole body of the electors of state; as, to
          dissolve Parliament and appeal to the country.
          [1913 Webster]

                All the country in a general voice
                Cried hate upon him.              --Shak.
          [1913 Webster]

   4. (Law)
      (a) A jury, as representing the citizens of a country.
      (b) The inhabitants of the district from which a jury is
          drawn.
          [1913 Webster]

   5. (Mining.) The rock through which a vein runs.
      [1913 Webster]

   Conclusion to the country. See under Conclusion.

   To put one's self upon the country, or To throw one's self
   upon the country, to appeal to one's constituents; to stand
      trial before a jury.
      [1913 Webster]


From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

Country \Coun"try\, a.
   1. Pertaining to the regions remote from a city; rural;
      rustic; as, a country life; a country town; the country
      party, as opposed to city.
      [1913 Webster]

   2. Destitute of refinement; rude; unpolished; rustic; not
      urbane; as, country manners.
      [1913 Webster]

   3. Pertaining, or peculiar, to one's own country.
      [1913 Webster]

            She, bowing herself towards him, laughing the cruel
            tyrant to scorn, spake in her country language. --2
                                                  Macc. vii. 27.
      [1913 Webster]


From WordNet (r) 2.0:

country
     n 1: the territory occupied by a nation; "he returned to the land
          of his birth"; "he visited several European countries"
          [syn: state, land]
     2: a politically organized body of people under a single
        government; "the state has elected a new president";
        "African nations"; "students who had come to the nation's
        capitol"; "the country's largest manufacturer"; "an
        industrialized land" [syn: state, nation, land, commonwealth,
         res publica, body politic]
     3: the people who live in a nation or country; "a statement
        that sums up the nation's mood"; "the news was announced
        to the nation"; "the whole country worshipped him" [syn: nation,
         land, a people]
     4: an area outside of cities and towns; "his poetry celebrated
        the slower pace of life in the country" [syn: rural area]
        [ant: urban area]
     5: a particular geographical region of indefinite boundary
        (usually serving some special purpose or distinguished by
        its people or culture or geography); "it was a mountainous
        area"; "Bible country" [syn: area]


From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0:

115 Moby Thesaurus words for "country":
   Arcadian, acres, agrarian, agrestic, agricultural, airspace,
   alluvion, alluvium, arable land, area, belt, blue-ribbon jury,
   boondocks, bucolic, campestral, clay, clod, confines,
   continental shelf, corridor, countrified, countryside, crust,
   department, dirt, district, division, dry land, dust, earth,
   environs, farm, fatherland, freehold, glebe, grand jury, grassland,
   ground, heartland, hinterland, home, homeland, hung jury, inquest,
   jury, jury list, jury of inquest, jury of matrons, jury panel,
   land, landholdings, lithosphere, lowland, marginal land, marl,
   milieu, mold, mother country, motherland, mountains, nation,
   native land, neighborhood, offshore rights, outback, outland,
   panel, part, parts, pastoral, petit jury, place, police jury,
   power, precincts, premises, provinces, provincial, purlieus,
   quarter, real estate, real property, realm, region, regolith,
   rural, rustic, salient, section, sessions, sod, soil, space,
   special jury, state, sticks, subaerial deposit, subsoil, terra,
   terra firma, terrain, territory, the country, three-mile limit,
   topsoil, trial jury, twelve-mile limit, upland, venire, vicinage,
   vicinity, wilderness, woodland, woods, zone




From Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856):

COUNTRY. By country is meant the state of which one is a member. 
     2. Every man's country is in general the state in which he happens to 
have been born, though there are some exceptions. See Domicil; Inhabitant. 
But a man has the natural right to expatriate himself, i. e. to abandon his 
country, or his right of citizenship acquired by means of naturalization in 
any country in which he may have taken up his residence. See Allegiance; 
Citizen; Expatriation. in another sense, country is the same as pais. (q.v.) 





 
 Encyclopedia Opens New Window.

For other uses, see Country (disambiguation).
European topographical map
Same map as above, but showing sovereign states widely accepted by the UN instead of topographies

In geography, a country is a geographical region. The term is often applied to a political division or the territory of a sovereign state, or to a smaller, or former, political division of a geographical region. Usually, but not always, a country coincides with a sovereign territory and is associated with a state, nation or government.

In common usage, the term country is used in the sense of both nations and states, with definitions varying. In some cases it is used to refer both to states and to other political entities,[1][2][3] while in some occasions it refers only to states[4] It is not uncommon for general information or statistical publications to adopt the wider definition for purposes such as illustration and comparison.[5][6][7][8][9]

Some cohesive geographical entities, which were formerly sovereign states, are commonly regarded and referred to still as countries; such as England, Scotland and Wales – in the United Kingdom.[10][11][12][13] Historically, the countries of the former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia were others. Former states such as Bavaria (now part of Germany) and Piedmont (now part of Italy) would not normally be referred to as "countries" in contemporary English. The degree of autonomy of non-state countries varies widely. Some are possessions of states, as several states have overseas dependencies (such as the British Virgin Islands, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, and American Samoa), with territory and citizenry distinct from their own. Such dependent territories are sometimes listed together with independent states on lists of countries, and may be treated as a "country of origin" in international trade, as Hong Kong is. Some countries are divided among several states, such as Korea and Kurdistan.

Contents

[edit] Etymology and development of the word

Country has developed from the Latin contra, meaning "against", used in the sense of "that which lies against, or opposite to, the view", i.e. the landscape spread out to the view. From this came the Late Latin term contrata, which became the modern Italian contrada. The term appears in Middle English from the 13th century, already in several different senses.[14]

In English the word has increasingly become associated with political divisions, so that one sense, associated with the indefinite article - "a country" - is now a synonym for state, or a former sovereign state, in the sense of sovereign territory.[15] Areas much smaller than a political state may be called by names such as the West Country in England, the Black Country (a heavily industrialized part of England), "Constable Country" (a part of East Anglia painted by John Constable), the "big country" (used in various contexts of the American West), "coal country" (used of parts of the US and elsewhere) and many other terms.[16]

The equivalent terms in French and Romance languages (pays and variants) have not carried the process of being identified with political sovereign states as far as the English "country", and in many European countries the words are used for sub-divisions of the national territory, as in the German Länder, as well as a less formal term for a sovereign state. France has very many "pays" that are officially recognised at some level, and are either natural regions, like the Pays de Bray, or reflect old political or economic unities, like the Pays de la Loire. At the same time Wales, the United States, and Brazil are also "pays" in everyday French speech.

A version of "country" can be found in the modern French language as contrée, based on the word cuntrée in Old French[16], that is used similarly to the word "pays" to define regions and unities, but can also be used to describe a political state in some particular cases. The modern Italian contrada is a word with its meaning varying locally, but usually meaning a ward or similar small division of a town, or a village or hamlet in the countryside.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Acts Interpretation Act 1901 - Sect 22: Meaning of certain words". Australasian Legal Information Institute. http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/cth/consol_act/aia1901230/s22.html. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  2. ^ "The Kwet Koe v Minister for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs & Ors [1997] FCA 912 (8 September 1997)". Australasian Legal Information Institute. http://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/disp.pl/au/cases/cth/federal%5fct/1997/912.html. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  3. ^ "U.S. Department of State Foreign Affairs Manual Volume 2—General" (PDF). United States Department of State. http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/84411.pdf. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  4. ^ Rosenberg, Matt. "Geography: Country, State, and Nation". http://geography.about.com/cs/politicalgeog/a/statenation.htm. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  5. ^ "Greenland Country Information". Countryreports.org. http://www.countryreports.org/country.aspx?countryid=96&countryName=countryid=96&countryName=Greenland. Retrieved 2008-05-28.  "The World Factbook - Rank Order - Exports". Central Intelligence Agency. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2078rank.html. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  6. ^ "Index of Economic Freedom". The Heritage Foundation. http://www.heritage.org/index/countries.cfm. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  7. ^ "Index of Economic Freedom - Top 10 Countries". The Heritage Foundation. http://www.heritage.org/research/features/index/topten.cfm. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  8. ^ "Asia-Pacific (Region A) Economic Information" (PDF). The Heritage Foundation. http://www.heritage.org/research/features/index/chapters/pdf/index2007_RegionA_Asia-Pacific.pdf. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  9. ^ "Subjective well-being in 97 countries" (PDF). University of Michigan. http://umich.edu/news/happy_08/HappyChart.pdf. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  10. ^ "Legal Research Guide: United Kingdom - Law Library of Congress (Library of Cong". Library of Congress website. Library of Congress. 2009-07-23. http://www.loc.gov/law/help/uk.php. Retrieved 2009-09-22. "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is the collective name of four countries, England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. The four separate countries were united under a single Parliament through a series of Acts of Union." 
  11. ^ "countries within a country:number10.gov.uk". 10 Downing Street website. 10 Downing Street. 2003-01-10. http://www.number10.gov.uk/Page823. Retrieved 2009-09-22. "The United Kingdom is made up of four countries: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland." 
  12. ^ "Commonwealth Secretariat - Geography". Commonwealth Secretariat website. Commonwealth Secretariat. 2009-09-22. http://www.thecommonwealth.org/YearbookInternal/139598/geography/. Retrieved 2009-09-22. "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (UK) is a union of four countries: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland." 
  13. ^ "Travelling Europe - United Kingdom". European Youth Portal. European Commission. 2009-06-29. http://europa.eu/youth/travelling_europe/index_uk_en.html. Retrieved 2009-09-22. "The United Kingdom is made up of four countries: England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales." 
  14. ^ John Simpson, Edmund Weiner, ed. "country". Oxford English Dictionary (1971 compact ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198611862. 
  15. ^ OED, Country
  16. ^ a b John Simpson, Edmund Weiner, ed. Oxford English Dictionary (1971 compact ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198611862. 

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