Answer this question…mean constructed
Which usually consists 5-6 buildings and families.
buildings
it has some large buildings
geography
Human geography - things to do with people, e.g. cities buildings, population Physical Geography - things to do with nature, e.g. mountains, forrests, earthquakes
In geography, a compound refers to a group of buildings or structures located in close proximity to each other. This can include residential, commercial, or industrial buildings that are clustered together. Compounds can also refer to enclosed spaces, such as a military or diplomatic complex.
In geography, an element refers to a specific component or attribute of the environment that contributes to a larger system or pattern. Elements can include physical features such as landforms, climate, vegetation, or human-made structures like buildings or transportation networks. Understanding elements helps geographers analyze and interpret various spatial relationships and processes in the natural and human environment.
Physical Geography is the natural side of geography. Weather, rocks, soils, etc. Human is cities, roads, buildings, urbanization, etc. We humans affect physical geography by living. We build roads and buildings. Our cities cause a heat island which is kind of a bubble of heat in urban areas. This is hotter than the surrounding cities. It can influence rain and climate downwind of the heat island. We dump things chancing the soils. There are other ways, but this is a general start on some of the ways that human geography affects physical geography.
geography does mean it location too
It means, people. Anything to do with people in Geography is social.
"La geography manda" is Spanish for "geography rules" or "geography rocks." It is an expression used to show appreciation or excitement for geography.
Physical characteristics in geography are natural features such as mountains and rivers. The opposite of Physical characteristics is Cultural/Human characteristics, which are man-made features such as buildings, houses, parks etc.