Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
1. Print each page you want to use. There are 4 sets in this material: 2 sets are color-coded, 2 sets are not. 2. Cut out each flag. 3. Fold each flag in half, then open with blank side facing up.
The World
The World
4. Apply glue along the crease line and 1 half of the flag.
(T-pin)
6. Fold the flag in half making sure the toothpick remains in the middle of the flag.
The World
7. You can use clear contact paper or clear packing tape to 'laminate' the flags by hand.
Europe
South America NorthAmerica
The World
North America
South America
Europe
Asia
Africa
Australia
Antarctica
Australasia
Oceania
Choose the term (Australia, Oceania, or Australasia) that suits your needs. Oceania is a name used for varying groups of islands of the Pacific Ocean. In its narrow usage it refers to Polynesia (including New Zealand), Melanesia (including New Guinea) and Micronesia. In a wider usage it includes Australia. It may also include the Malay archipelago. Although the islands of Oceania do not form part of a true continent, Oceania is sometimes associated with the continent of Australia for the purposes of dividing the whole world into continental groupings. As such, it is the smallest "continent" in area and the second smallest, after Antarctica, in population.
Australasia is the area that includes Australia, New Zealand, New Guinea, and the many smaller islands in the vicinity, most of which are the eastern part of Indonesia. The name was coined by Charles de Brosses in Histoire des navigations aux terres australes (1756). He derived it from the Latin for "south of Asia" and differentiated the area from Polynesia and the south east Pacific (Magellanica). Australasia is sometimes used as a term for Australia and New Zealand alone, in the absence of another word limited to those two countries.
The World
North America
South America
Europe
Asia
Africa
Australia
Antarctica
Australasia
Oceania
The World
North America
South America
Europe
Asia
Africa
Australia
Antarctica
Australasia
Oceania
The World
North America
South America
Europe
Asia
Africa
Australia
Antarctica
Australasia
Oceania