Cities and Towns
Counties and Borders
States and Regions
Countries and the World
100

What do we call a place where people live, work, and go to school—city or town?

A city or a town.

100

What is a county?


A part of a state

100

How many states are in the United States?

50

100

What is a country?

A land with people, borders, and a government.

200

Which usually has more people, a city or a town?

A city.

200

Name one thing a county government takes care of.

Roads, schools, parks, safety.

200

What do borders show us about states?

Where one state ends and another begins.

200

What do borders tell us about countries?

Where one country ends and another begins.

300

Name one service a city provides.

Police, firefighters, schools, hospitals, trash pickup, buses.

300

What is a border?

A line that shows where one place ends and another begins.

300

Name one of the five regions of the United States.

Northeast, Southeast, Midwest, Southwest, West.

300

Name one thing that makes countries different from each other.

Flags, money, languages, traditions.

400

Which is more likely to have tall buildings and busy streets, a city or a town?

A city.

400

Give one example of something that can make a border.

A river, mountain, lake, or straight line on a map.

400

Which region is known for deserts and canyons?

The Southwest.

400

Do countries sometimes trade and work together?


Yes

500

What is one thing that both cities and towns have in common?

People, schools, leaders, rules.

500

What is one important building you might find in a county?


Courthouse, jail, county office.

500

Why do we divide the U.S. into regions?

To make it easier to study and understand.

500

What are three things every country has?

People, land, government.