Yes, Minneapolis and Moscow are very close in latitude. Minneapolis is located at approximately 44.98° N, while Moscow is at about 55.75° N. While they are both situated in the Northern Hemisphere, Moscow is further north than Minneapolis.
Scotland is warmed by the Gulf Stream of the Atlantic Ocean, Moscow is a long way from the coast.
Copenhagen and Moscow are on similar a latitude to Edinburgh.
Moscow, Russia is at 55 degrees 45 minutes north, and the US/Canadian border is at 49 degrees north. So the only parts of the USA that are at the same latitude as Moscow Russia would be along the Alaskan "panhandle", the chain of islands that follow the Pacific coastline. Looking in Google Earth along that line of latitude, I don't see anything that you might call a "city", or even a "town". There's a village called Thorne Bay, AK that's pretty close, though.
Moscow,Copenhagen
Harbin, China, is located at approximately 45.75° N latitude. Cities that share a similar latitude include Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Edmonton, Alberta, in Canada, as well as parts of southern Russia, such as Irkutsk. Additionally, some regions in northern Europe, like Helsinki, Finland, also lie around this latitude.
The time in Moscow and Uganda is always the same (UTC+3).
Maine is located at the same latitude as Saint Petersburg, Russia.
Moscow is the capital of Russia, Tokyo is the capital of Japan.
no - Northern
Some cities at the same latitude as St. Petersburg, Russia (approximately 60 degrees N) include Helsinki in Finland, Stockholm in Sweden, and Anchorage in Alaska, USA.
Russia is in the eastern hemisphere, on the continents of Europe and Asia. Every point in it has both a latitude and a longitude, and no two points have the same pair of numbers.
Not exactly, but there's some broad overlap in latitudes.