Statistics for Geography Multi-select

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General Stats

  • This quiz has been taken 23 times
  • The average score is 63 of 90

Answer Stats

QuestionTileSelect% Correct
current territories of the United States.PhilippinesNo
100%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).AlbaniaNo
95%
current territories of the United States.F. S. MicronesiaNo
95%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”ItalyYes
95%
current territories of the United States.PalauNo
95%
current territories of the United States.Puerto RicoYes
95%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.BelarusYes
91%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.Bosnia and HerzegovinaYes
91%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.BruneiNo
91%
landlocked countries.CroatiaNo
91%
countries using the euro as their official currency.GreeceYes
91%
landlocked countries.KuwaitNo
91%
landlocked countries.ParaguayYes
91%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”Saudi ArabiaYes
91%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).South KoreaYes
91%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.ZambiaNo
91%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.CroatiaYes
86%
current territories of the United States.GuamYes
86%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”IcelandYes
86%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.KomodoNo
86%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).LesothoYes
86%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”LithuaniaNo
86%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”MoroccoYes
86%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”NamibiaNo
86%
current territories of the United States.NiueNo
86%
current territories of the United States.SamoaNo
86%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.ThraceNo
86%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.AlbaniaNo
82%
landlocked countries.DjiboutiNo
82%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.HungaryNo
82%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”LatviaYes
82%
countries using the euro as their official currency.MaltaYes
82%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.MoldovaYes
82%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”OmanNo
82%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).Papua New GuineaYes
82%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.TurkmenistanYes
82%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.BulgariaNo
77%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.LithuaniaYes
77%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.North MacedoniaYes
77%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.RomaniaNo
77%
landlocked countries.Burkina FasoYes
73%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.CanadaNo
73%
countries using the euro as their official currency.CyprusYes
73%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).EswatiniNo
73%
landlocked countries.PakistanNo
73%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.SloveniaYes
73%
countries using the euro as their official currency.SloveniaYes
73%
countries using the euro as their official currency.SwedenNo
73%
current territories of the United States.Wake IslandYes
73%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.ArmeniaYes
68%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).GambiaYes
68%
landlocked countries.LaosYes
68%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.SlovakiaNo
68%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.TexasNo
68%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).BangladeshNo
64%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.Costa RicaNo
64%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.Costa RicaNo
64%
countries that were once part of Yugoslavia.Czech RepublicNo
64%
countries using the euro as their official currency.DenmarkNo
64%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.EcuadorYes
64%
countries using the euro as their official currency.FinlandYes
64%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.F. S. MicronesiaYes
64%
countries using the euro as their official currency.HungaryNo
64%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.MoldovaNo
64%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.ParaguayNo
64%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.TogoNo
64%
landlocked countries.GeorgiaNo
59%
countries that were once an administrative subdivision of the former Soviet Union.PolandNo
59%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.TongaYes
59%
landlocked countries.ArmeniaYes
55%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).BruneiYes
55%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.ChadYes
55%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.HaitiYes
55%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.KansasYes
55%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.MissouriYes
55%
current territories of the United States.Navassa IslandYes
55%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.ArkansasYes
50%
countries whose capital city begins with “R.”DominicaYes
50%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.KiribatiNo
50%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.MississippiNo
50%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.Antigua and BarbudaYes
45%
countries using the euro as their official currency.LiechtensteinNo
45%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.NebraskaYes
45%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.El SalvadorYes
41%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.OklahomaYes
41%
countries whose capital city’s name contains at least one punctuation mark.GrenadaYes
36%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.IowaYes
32%
sovereign nations that use the U.S. dollar as their official currency.ZimbabweYes
23%
countries with one and only one land border (bridges and maritime causeways do not count as a land border).CanadaNo
14%
U.S. states whose entire territory was part of the Louisiana Purchase.LouisianaNo
9%

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