Youcan probably guess the capitals of France and Italy, but how well would you do if you had to come up with capitals of Slovakia or North Macedonia? Geography facts such as those can be the difference in how your next geography quiz on Europe goes. By playing this map quiz game now, you will find out just how ready you are.
Description:
This map shows countries and their capitals in Europe.
You may download, print or use the above map for educational, personal and non-commercial purposes. Attribution is required. For any website, blog, scientific research or e-book, you must place a hyperlink (to this page) with an attribution next to the image used.
I am running Windows 10 Home Edition with all the latest updates. Intel Core i5 with 8 GB RAM. So far Affinity Publisher has been running pretty well. I am planning on closing and reopening to see if that fixes the issue (and will update), but I figured I would capture a video and send a screenshot before that just so you have a record that this happened. Not sure what caused this. I really can't narrow it down to anything in particular. I am laying out a short booklet, A5 page sizes. Basically front and back of an A4 sheet that will be folded in half. I have my first page done and had no oddities there. Moved onto the second page. Created my first text box with no trouble. Created a second one where I will have some text in a list. I pasted the text in and went to remove an extra line break and when I typed backspace it inserted a non-printable character. I selected just the non-printables and typed delete and it deleted the whole box. I tried again, same result. I tried just creating a new box and typing into it and discovered that all the characters are capital letters. If I use an arrow key to move the cursor I just get more non-printable characters. Really weird. I did switch between the app and my web browser where I have the original text that I am formatting into a booklet, but I did that on the first page with no trouble.
Great. I have since done a second layout of a short booklet and did not run into this issue again. Sorry I can't provide more reliable reproduction steps. If the software is creating some kind of debug logs I would be happy to send those along, just tell me where to find them
European Capitals Crossword Puzzle Free Printable Post Preview: You will find multiple versions of a Capitals of Europe Crossword puzzle. You can use the European capitals crossword puzzle for practice, review, homework, or even as a European capitals quiz or test.
I know that I have previously professed my childhood love of geography and state capitals. So, it will probably come as no surprise that when I was in sixth grade and we had to learn European capitals, I was up for the challenge.
Of course, the capital cities in Europe that I had to memorize were different than when my daughter also had to memorize them in sixth grade. Sure, some are the same, but when I was in sixth grade, there were a lot fewer countries than there are now. (It would be the following school year that we would watch coverage of the Berlin Wall coming down, so a lot of changes came to Europe rapidly after that.)
One thing that I hope you like about this printable is that it is versatile. You can use this with a variety of ages from upper elementary school through high school. It can also be used for different purposes. The European Capitals Crossword Puzzle printable can be used for in-class practice, review, homework, or as a European capitals quiz or test.
The first page has the crossword grid and the names of 45 European countries. It also includes a few countries that are in both Europe and Asia. Students are given the country as the clue. Then they will put in the capital city as their answer.
The first page has the crossword grid and the names of 35 European countries. Students are given the country as the clue. They will then need to put in the capital city as the answer. I based this on the list of capitals that my daughter had to memorize two years ago.
The second page has the same crossword grid and 35 European country clues. However, the version on the second page also has a word bank. The word bank lists all of the possible answers for the puzzle.
You may not sell, publish, or host this printable on other websites. This includes that the printable may NOT be hosted on a school website for others to download it from that site, though a school may link to this post for others to download it here.
You may not claim the crossword puzzle as your creation or distribute it in any way other than in a classroom setting without express written permission from Angie Kauffman/Real Life at Home. Copyright remains with Real Life at Home.
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Angie, mom to three very fun kids, is the founder of Real Life at Home. With degrees in elementary education (B.A.) and special education (M.S.Ed.), as well as being a former homeschooler, she is passionate about supporting both parents and teachers by providing printables, crafts, and activities to help children learn and grow.
This document contains a table listing the flags, countries, capitals, populations, and total areas of various European nations. There are over 40 nations listed, along with their respective flags, capital cities, populations ranging from around 30,000 to over 80 million, and total land areas ranging from under 1 square kilometer to over 1.7 million square kilometers. The table provides a overview of basic facts about the countries of Europe.Read less
B. Labeling a blank map. During this portion of the lesson, the students canwork in pairs labeling a blank map of Europe.They can use an atlas or another tool to guide them. They will label allEuropean countries and their capital cities. If this is not finished in class,it can be completed as a homework assignment.
D. Quiz. The students will be given a blank map. This time they will workindividually to label the map. They will have to identify all 37 countries.They should be able to identify at least 28 of the countries and theircapitals.
E. Adaptations for different learners: For the students that are notauditory learners, the teacher will supply a map with the capitals as well asthe countries for the game. For students with ADD or ADHD they can sit next tosomebody that can help them during the game. Some students can be allowed extratime for the quiz. When labeling the first map, the teacher can pair studentswith better concentration abilities with those who have a hard timeconcentrating.
The blank map of Europe that can be displayed in the classroom to impart a lasting understanding of the europe in your geography lessons. It is ideal for children, and will provide their learning with visual support, developing their ability to locate countries on the map. It includes Velcro fasteners that you can attach on different points to play games with the students.
You will also receive a link to access the digital and interactive versions of the map through the free app Genially. You will have several digital versions of the map to choose from, interactive maps and challenges It includes:
A blank map always comes in handy, no matter which grade you are in. So, here are some free printable blank Europe map worksheets for you to practice all the countries and their capitals. Click on the pictures below to get the printable PDF.
This no-prep print and digital map has students label the countries of Southern Europe and record their capitals. Students will label a map of Europe which includes 18 countries and 6 territories. They will also label the Adriatic Sea, Aegean Sea, Atlantic Ocean, Bay of Biscay, Black Sea, Ionian Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Strait of Gibraltar, and the Tyrrhenian Sea.
Lastly, to further help students remember the capitals of the countries located in Southern Europe, students will write the capitals down on a handout. This handout can be used again as a quiz. This download also includes digital versions so it is easy to use with hybrid classes and remote students.
Is your homeschool studying about European countries? If so, this printable European capitals crossword puzzle will go great alongside your lessons. This printable can be used for review, homework, or even as a European capitals quiz. There are two different levels for the puzzles; there is an option for 45 countries in Europe or 35 countries in Europe. You can also grab a version of each with and without a word bank. You can use this freebie with a variety of ages from upper elementary school through high school.
Last Thursday members of the ISAW community gathered in the Oak Room for the inaugural ISAW Game Night. This was the first of what we hope will become a semi-regular event, in which we'll gather in the Oak Library to play board and card games based on the ancient world, archaeology, and academia.
But wait, you say, do such games really exist? They do!
For our first game night, we played Thebes (Jenseits von Theben), a 2007 (unintentionally?) ironic simulation of the colonial enterprise of 19th- & early 20th-century archaeology. Players spend a few rounds studying or picking up gossip about Greek, Cretan, Egyptian, Palestinian, and Mesopotamian antiquities in neoclassical European capitals, and then travel to exotic "oriental" excavation sites to "dig" for artifacts (which is accomplished by pulling tokens out of cloth bags--some tokens representing specific historical artifacts, and other, blank tokens representing dirt). Bonus points are awarded for holding exhibitions and attending conferences--back in Europe. It's a lighthearted representation of an morally fraught period in the history of archaeology, as pointed out in Patrick Rael's excellent essay on the tricky ethical territory occupied by games that simulate colonialist history. Purely from the 21st-century coffee table perspective, however, it's also a lot of fun, as the attendees of Game Night quickly discovered.
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