Orlean
Its a neighborhood and a street.
Well, some cities have mountains right beside them, with an ocean or other body of water on the other side, allowing the city to get some pretty regular rain fall, but say a city with mountains AND an ocean or other body of water were on the same side. If the body of water was on the opposite side of the mountain than the city, the city might become a bit dry during most of the year. If the body of water was on the same side as the city beside the mountains(meaning that the body of water is one the same side of the mountain that the city is.), than the city would get at least SOME rainfall, just not as much as if the mountains and body of water were on opposite sides of the city. (Sorry, what I mean by the sentence in the parentheses is that the body of water AND the mountains are on the same side beside of the city.)
Rome is a city, it does not have oceans in it. The nearest large body of water would be the Mediterranean Sea.
The Mississippi river and lake Ponchartrain.
A "port" city, or perhaps Venice.
rockford, illinois
port city
The Canadian city that lies across a body of water from New York is Ontario, Canada. It is across from Niagara Falls, New York and the body of water is Niagara Falls.
Las Vegas
Jefferson City is the capital city of Missouri. A peninsula is a point of land extending into a body of water.
Two of them would be the Ajusco mountain, just south of Mexico City, or the Popocatepetl volcano, some 70 kilometers (43 miles) southeast of the city.