Australia

Wikidata Australia
Res apud Vicidata repertae:
Australia: insigne
Australia: insigne
Australia: vexillum
Australia: vexillum
Terra continens: Oceania
Territoria finitima: Indonesia, Nova Zelandia, Papua Nova Guinea, Timora Orientalis, Insulae Salomonis, Nova Caledonia, Vanuatu
Locus: 25°0′0″S 133°0′0″E
Caput: Camberra

Gestio

democratia repraesentativa, Monarchia constitutionalis, Foederatio
Princeps: Carolus III (rex Britanniarum)
Praefectus: Antonius Albanese
Consilium: Parliament of Australia
Iudicium: High Court of Australia
Situs interretialis

Populus

Numerus: 26 473 055
Sermo publicus: Australian English, lingua gesticulatoria Australiana
Zona horaria: UTC+10
Moneta: Australian dollar

Commemoratio

Paean: Advance Australia Fair

Sigla

ISO AU, AUS, 036; IOC AUS
Dominium interretiale: .au
Praefixum telephonicum: +61
Siglum autoraedarum: AUS

Tabula aut despectus

Australia: situs
Australia: situs

Australia (Anglice titulo pleniore Commonwealth of Australia[1]) est monarchia constitutionalis in hemisphaerio australi sita, quae in continente Australiana, insula Tasmania, prope medium territorium in Antarctica, multisque insulis minoribus in oceanis Indico et Pacifico consistit.[2] Civitates vicinae sunt Indonesia, Timoria Orientalis, et Papua Nova Guinea ad septentriones, Insulae Salomonis, Vanuatu, et Nova Caledonia ad boreorientalem, et Nova Zelandia ad meridio-orientalem. Australia etiam insula maior orbe terrarum est, cuius fines ut absoluta continens saepe putantur; pars autem totius continentis geologicae est.

Caput est Canberra, sed maxima urbs est Sydneium. Civitas magnitudine civitatum orbis terrarum est sexta, totum continentem Australianum occupans, et in Australasia maxima civitas, quia insula non est finitima aliis civitatibus. Nomen Australia ex Latina exploratorum sententia Terra Australi natum est.

  1. Ut qui Latine diceret "Respublica Australiana": "The Commonwealth of Australia, the word[,] is the exact equivalent of the Roman Respublica—otherwise our modern republic" (Sydney Morning Herald, 3 Aprilis 1891).
  2. Australia describes the body of water south of its mainland as the Southern Ocean, rather than the Indian Ocean as defined by the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO). In 2000, a vote of IHO member nations defined the term "Southern Ocean" as applying only to the waters between Antarctica and 60 degrees south latitude. Rosenberg, Matt (20 August 2009). "The New Fifth Ocean–The World's Newest Ocean – The Southern Ocean". About.com: Geography .

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Tubidy