Yes. Brooklyn and Queens are part of Long Island, at the western edge of it. Queens is directly above Brooklyn. If you continue north in Brooklyn, you'll end up in Queens, and if you continue heading east from Queens/Brooklyn, you will end up on the rest of Long Island (Nassau & Suffolk Counties).
Brooklyn Queens day is a day when Queens and Brooklyn came together.
There are four tunnels connecting to Manhattan: the Lincoln Tunnel, Holland Tunnel, Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel, and Queens-Midtown Tunnel. The Lincoln and Holland Tunnels connect New Jersey to Manhattan. The Queens-Midtown Tunnel connects Queens to Manhattan, and the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel connects Brooklyn to Manhattan.
There are four tunnels connecting to Manhattan: the Lincoln Tunnel, Holland Tunnel, Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel, and Queens-Midtown Tunnel. The Lincoln and Holland Tunnels connect New Jersey to Manhattan. The Queens-Midtown Tunnel connects Queens to Manhattan, and the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel connects Brooklyn to Manhattan.
Flying from London, you have to pass over Queens before you pass over Brooklyn. So, Queens is closer to London than Brooklyn.
queens
Brooklyn and Queens are right next to each other. They both occupy the western end of Long Island. The northern border of Brooklyn is the southern border of Queens.
Queens.
Queens. Although part of what is usually called Bushwick, Brooklyn, today used to be called Ridgewood, Brooklyn.
brooklyn
No
queens , brooklyn and the bronx
Brooklyn College