Yes... of corse the 50 states of the u.s. lol:)
North CarolinaNorth DakotaSouth CarolinaSouth Dakots.
Not really although there are landforms in North Dakota which have been named "mountains", but which are really buttes or hills and none of them are very famous. North Dakota has the Killdeer Mountains which consist of two large, flat-topped buttes and the Turtle Mountains. North Dakota's highest point is White Butte, which is found in the North Dakota Badlands.
Saskatchewan and Manitoba, Canada are to the north of North Dakota and North Dakota is to the north of South Dakota.
North Dakota is up by the border of Canada, Wyoming is just next to South Dakota.
North Dakota is north of South Dakota.
The US state of North Dakota is north of South Dakota.
The highest point is White Butte, and it is hardly a mountain. North Dakota has the Killdeer Mountains which consist of two large, flat-topped buttes and the Turtle Mountains. North Dakota's highest point is White Butte, which is found in the North Dakota Badlands.
No, North Dakota does not "pay you to live there". If you are an employee of the state of North Dakota then you would get paid to work in North Dakota by the state of North Dakota.
It has a mix of the two. As is true of any place most tornadoes in North Dakota are weak. But occasionally it does get really bad ones. One of the most notable was the F5 tornado that struck Fargo, North Dakota in 1957. One thing that should be noted is that since North Dakota is rather sparsely populated the tornado there have less opportunity to cause a lot of damage.
Only North Dakota shares a border with Canada.
The state of North Dakota is north (or above) the state of South Dakota.
The first four words of the "North Dakota Hymn" are: North Dakota, North Dakota