description | city/town | % Correct |
---|---|---|
The Avon River flows through this, Canterbury's largest city | Christchurch | 89%
|
The Prime Minister's offices, nicknamed the Beehive, are here | Wellington | 89%
|
Rangitoto, a volcano, is in its harbour | Auckland | 57%
|
Napier's twin city | Hastings | 56%
|
Nicknamed "Palmy" by its locals | Palmerston North | 56%
|
The world's easternmost city, the first each day to see the sun | Gisborne | 55%
|
In Maori, it means Two Lakes | Rotorua | 49%
|
Where the Grey River meets the sea | Greymouth | 48%
|
The Centre of New Zealand, a hill, is in this South Island city | Nelson | 48%
|
The last 20 years were spent debating whether its name has an h in it | Whanganui | 48%
|
NZ's westernmost city, inappropriately in Southland | Invercargill | 45%
|
NZ's northernmost city, appropriately in Northland | Whangarei | 45%
|
The South Island terminal of the Cook Strait ferry from Wellington | Picton | 44%
|
Western port, named after a southern English port | New Plymouth | 41%
|
Largest town on the shore of Lake Te Anau | Te Anau | 41%
|
Where the Treaty of Waitangi was most famously signed | Waitangi | 41%
|
Marlborough's capital | Blenheim | 35%
|
In 1900 the 2nd largest town in NZ (after Dunedin), near Coromandel | Thames | 30%
|
Home town of King Country rugby team, and rugby great Colin Meads | Te Kuiti | 13%
|
This town's streets are appropriately named after Shakespeare's characters | Stratford | 11%
|
Copyright H Brothers Inc, 2008–2024
Contact Us | Go To Top | View Mobile Site