Manchester England is further north than Birmingham England.
Birmingham is further north than Bristol.
yes, just! maps.google.co.uk
Manchester which is also the third largest city in England
No. Birmingham is about 120 miles northwest of London.
Birmingham is only about 80 miles further north than London, although it is about 120 miles by car.
Shipley is about 42 miles northeast of Manchester.
moscow
Manchester is further south than Leeds - so Manchester is closer to Rayleigh.
No, New York City is further away from Manchester than Berlin, but Las Vegas is further away than NYC or Berlin.
Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.Parts of Asia are further north than Portugal and there are also parts of it that are further south than Portugal.
No. Sweden is further north than Scotland.
These words used as conjunctions are very similar in meaning. Let's take the sentences "John is from Birmingham" and "Alicia is from Manchester." "John is from Birmingham although Alicia is from Manchester." The first part of the sentence confirms a theory, but the second provides a counterexample. This would be a response to "Is everyone here from Birmingham?" "While" means "at the same time as", and "John is from Birmingham while Alicia is from Manchester" means that both statements are true at the same time. The statement as a whole could be a counterexample in response to a statement like "Is everybody here from the same city?" "John is from Birmingham whereas Alicia is is from Manchester" is like the sentence with "while" except the focus is more on the people than the cities. (Subjects rather than predicates) It could be a response to "Are John and Alicia from the same place?" "John is from Birmingham where Alicia is from Manchester" is not colloquial.