Five continents??
At one point a character mentions "the five continents". Is that some sort of lame joke,
or was the writer too dumb to realize that there are seven continents?
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At one point a character mentions "the five continents". Is that some sort of lame joke,
or was the writer too dumb to realize that there are seven continents?
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Are YOU too dumb to realise that moviemakers of the 1970s hardly had access to that information?
Are you too dumb to realize that they actually DID have access to that information?
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You both need to watch https://youtu.be/3uBcq1x7P34 @1:20
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Interesting, but I'm going to stick with seven.
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When I was a child it was originally taught as 5 continents, hence the 5 Olympic rings - These five rings represent the five (inhabited) continents of the world: Africa, America, Asia, Europe and Australasia. Spain & Portugal apparently still teach 5 (inhabited) continents (Helpful Andy).
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You were taught incorrectly. The seven continents are North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa,
Australia and Antarctica. I've been to five of them, and plan to visit a sixth, Australia, in the fall.
And what the hell is Australaisa??
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I went to Oz a couple of years ago and had a super time - I plan to go back. Only Antarctica outstanding for me.
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Good on ya, mate! After I visit Australia and New Zealand, Antarctica will be the only one left for me as well.
I plan to do a cruise there in the near future.
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Yes, I cruise is on my bucket list too.
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Outstanding! I came upon this video by accident, and now this is probably the cruise ship I will take.
I like the fact that it's relatively small. Check it out!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RUfOU_Dqw8&t=800s&ab_channel=KaraandNateKaraandNate
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Yeah, they must have been referring to the five *inhabited* continents, not including Antarctica which has nobody living on it but scientists and penguins.
There has been a great deal of argument over the years over whether Australia is or is not a continent, currently it is. Maybe in 1971 it was officially a very large island.
That sounds like a reasonable explanation to me.
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I remeber having that debate with my junior school teacher. (about 1979 prbly)
brought my "Junior encyclopedia of ... something or other " in to class to prove him wrong : )
what a nerd
I was always taught in school (1959 - 1972) that Australia was an "island-continent". In 1970, when the movie was made, it was regarded by most people that way, not as just an island.
shareDifferent societies have different definitions of continents and thus list different numbers of continents.
See here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continent#/media/File:Continental_models-Australia.gif
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continent#Number
Yes, I have since become aware of that.
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I count five: ketchup, mustard, soy sauce, vinegar and hot sauce.
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shareWait, there's seven. I forgot mayonaise and Europe.
shareLOL
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LOL. Reminds me of the line in Rocky II when they ask him about condominiums. His response: "I never use'em."
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https://youtu.be/GCH5jqvVpaY
Watch @0:39
A great scene from an hilarious movie! I love him (and Rob Bryden also)!
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There are only 5 rings in the Olympics symbol
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There are seven: North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Australia, Africa and Antarctica.
Which two are you denying?
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Well Antarctica probably is not in the olympics. And looks like they combined N and S America into one:
The interlocking rings of the Olympic flag was created by Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the co-founder of the modern Olympic games. The five rings represented the five participating continents of the time: Africa, Asia, America, Europe, and Oceania.
Who says Australia is a continent?
Most people do, including me.
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well , i guess so , althouth the top google link on the subject
https://www.google.com/url?https://www.worldometers.info/geography/7-continents/
calls it Australia/Oceania
Oceana sounds better to me , as it includes the other couttries in the vicinity
but little islands
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