It depends on whose definition you use. If you include Hong Kong, Macau and all the territories claimed by both China and India as part of China, then the USA is the fourth largest country by area (China third.) If you exclude them, then China becomes the fourth largest (the USA third).
The fourth largest country on Earth by population is Indonesia, with around 250 million people.
Uranus is the 7th planet from the Sun and the 4th largest planet in our solar system, after Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune. It is an ice giant with a diameter of about 50,724 kilometers, making it slightly larger than Neptune.
No, Neptune is the 4th largest planet in our solar system behind Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus.
No, Uranus is not the 2nd largest planet but the third largest planet. Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system after Jupiter. Uranus is 3rd largest by diameter, but 4th most massive. (Neptune is slightly smaller but denser than Uranus.)
That would be Uranus. Uranus has a diameter of about 51,000km, making it the third largest planet in terms of radus/diameter/volume etc. but it's mass is only 15 times that of Earth, less than Neptune, making it the fourth largest in terms of mass.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system and earth is the 5 th largest
Japan has the 3rd largest economy in the world, and it is an Asian country, not European. Germany is the 4th largest economy in the world, and it is a European country.
Neptune
No. Mercury is the smallest planet in the solar system. Neptune is the 4th largest planet.
Neptune is the 4th largest planet
No. Saturn is the second largest planet. Neptune comes in fourth place.
The 4th largest country in the world by area is China.
In 2008: the largest country by area is Russia; the largest country in population is China.
It is fourth largest by volume but third by mass.
Spain is the 51st largest country in the world and the 4th largest in Europe
None of the above. Earth is the 4th smallest planet.
Uranus is the 7th planet from the Sun and the 4th largest planet in our solar system, after Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune. It is an ice giant with a diameter of about 50,724 kilometers, making it slightly larger than Neptune.
No, size does not go with density. The Earth is the most dense planet in the solar system, but it is the 4th smallest planet.