Africa is the continent with the most countries, with a total of 54 recognized countries.
Russia and China both border 14 countries, the most of any.
Russia touches the most other countries, with a total of 14 neighboring countries.
A flat map exaggerates certain countries close to the poles. A globe shows the bodies of land in their actual size. For example: Greenland looks huge on a flat map, but looks much smaller (its actual size compared to the other countries) on a globe. Next, lines of longitude and latitude are more accurate on a globe.
Russia is the country with the most neighboring countries, sharing borders with 14 countries.
....flat. Hills are rare and seldom rise to more than 300 meters above sea level.
It is not the most accurate but it is close enough for general use. The Earth is not a perfect sphere. But a globe is better than a flat map because the Earth is not flat. If you map only covers a very small part of the Earth then a flat map is usually good enough but if the map is to portray countries and continents then if it remains flat it will distort either distances or areas or angles.
I once hear that other countries use the H instead of a B (or B flat, I can't remember) because of Bach. B=B A=A C=C H=B or B flat I cant remember if the first B in his name was a B natural or B flat. A lot of Bach's Fugues have a sequence of the notes.... B, A, C, and B flat..or back in the day.. B, A, C, H
C flat Major
Most likely E flat, but B flat is pretty common too.
Africa has the most number of countries with 55 countries.
Most likely every country , but especially the countries that don't have flat or arable fields like the north euoropen countries those really close to the North Pole like the Scandinavian , Greenland, the Åland Islands, the Faroes, Karelia, the Kola Peninsula and Svalbard
Africa has the most developing countries.
The European Plain.
Most definitely not.
The A Flat Natural Minor Scale
G-flat major scale has the most with 6 flats: b-flat, e-flat, a-flat, d-flat, g-flat, and c-flat.Of course, one could argue that other scales have more flats (such as C-flat major, F-flat major, B-double-flat major, etc), but these scales are typically notated as their enharmonic equivalent (e.g. A major instead of B-double-flat major).