The Allies did not "control" countries like the Axis did. The Axis occupied countries because their goal was to control the government. The Allies liberated countries, meaning they set them free from Axis rule and back into their own control. When the Allies "lost" land, it meant that they were defending another country and the Germans took that country over. When, for example, the USSR "lost" land, it just means the Germans pushed them back.
Take your pick. The main 4 Allies were USA, Great Britain, Russia, France. The main Axis were Germany, Italy, Japan.
Enemies of USA during WWII were Germany, Italy (for a small time) , and Japan (ALL AXIS) The Allies (USA's allies) were Great Britain, France, Poland, Italy (switched sides) , Greece, and Canada to name a few. Good thing I took that AP European History class!
allies, shortly after WWII Russia took over east Berlin and started the cold war with the us
Well, I wouldn't call them "players" probably more like factions, or sides. But you had the Allies and the Axis. The largest and most powerful countries in the Axis were: Nazi Germany, Japan and Italy. The major countries on the Allied side were: the United Kingdom, the US, the USSR (Russia) and France was in for the first year or so... But then the Nazi's took control of them, and they didn't help out very much until the Allies pushed them out of France.
The allies were his enemies. He was an Axis power that took a little longer to gain into power than the others.
Allied, he was the Prime Minister of Great Britain in 1939 but resigned after the disastrous Norwegian Campaign.
No one is "an allies". "An" is singular, referring to 1 thing, and the word "allies" is plural, for 2 or more things. No one is an axis; in this case that is also the title for a team of countries. The word "ally" [pronounced like the name Al + the word 'lie'] means a war friend, some member in an alliance. Was Neville Chamberlain a person of the Allies or Axis? Germany, Italy, and later Japan were in an alliance, called the Axis, and Great Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and later the USA were in an alliance, called the Allies [Al + lies]. The Germans had fostered an "Axis" of power, "axis" like the line the Earth spins around, and a bunch of friendly countries, or "Allies", weren't okay with that. Get the word? The reason the Allies weren't okay with the Axis is because the Axis wanted to take over the world, including the countries of the Allies (They didn't always admit it out loud). The Axis thought they could, and it seems like they were almost right. In Europe, classically, they took over Poland and France, and more of mainland Europe. Great Britain had a prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, who was known for appeasement, which means letting people have what they want. He was the leader of Great Britain, one of the Allies, and his strategy for dealing with the power-hungry countries of the Axis was letting them do what they wanted, hoping they would leave his country alone. The next leader of Great Britain, Winston Churchill, had a famously better strategy, of fighting them to the last drop of blood. History remembers Churchill better than Chamberlain, but they were both World War II leaders of Great Britain, an important Ally. SRS
204 countries took part
71 countries took part in the 2014 Commonwealth Games.
I believe 6 countries took part in World War II.
13 countries took part of the first world cup.