Introduction to some states in the United States, please ask in English. Thank you.

NewYork

The State University of New York (SUNY) system includes more than 70 schools

including schools in Asia State universities in Burnie, Binghamton, Buffalo, and Stony Brook. There are approximately two hundred and twenty private colleges and universities in New York State, among which the schools located in New York City

are: Columbia University, Barnard College, and Fordham University< /p>

Fordham University, Juilliard School of Music, Manhattan

Manhattan College, New York University, Pace

University), Pratt College, St. John's

University, and Sara Lawrence College. Other private schools include: Colgate University in Hamilton, and Dell University in Ithaca. Cornell University, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, Rochester University in Lochester ), Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs

(Skidmore College), Syracuse University in Syracuse, and Parkip

p>

Vassar College in Poughkeepsie. In addition, there are about forty two-year colleges and community colleges in New York State. The United States Military Academy is located in West Point

while the United States Coast Guard Academy is located in Kings Point City (Kings Point).

Geographical environment

The area of ??New York State is 127,189 square kilometers. The state can be divided into seven geographical regions: St. Laurent

The Low Country, the Adirondack High Country, the Great Lakes Low Country, the Hudson-Mohawk Low Country, and the New England High Country. , the Great Western Coastal Plain area, and the Appalachian Plateau area. The St. Lawrence Lowland is located in the northern part of the state, stretching from Alexandria Bay to the west and bounded by the St. Lawrence River to Canada. The Ediron Dyke Highlands region is located in the northeastern part of the state and includes the Ediron Dyke Mountains

The Great Lakes Lowland region in northwestern New York State borders Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. The Hudson-Mohawk Lowlands

is located in central and southeastern New York State and encompasses the valley of the Mohawk River. More than half of New York State's southern

eastern border belongs to the New England Highlands. The area stretches from Lake Champlain to Manhattan Island. The Great Western Coastal Plain area includes Staten Island, Long Island, and coastal areas. The Appalachian Plateau is

New York State's largest geographical area, covering most of the southern part of the state.

The major rivers in New York State are the Hudson River, Mohawk River, St. Lawrence River, and Niagara River. The main cities in the state are: New York

City, Buffalo, Rochester, Yonkers, Syracuse

< p> (Syracuse), and Albany (the state capital). The state has a population of over 18 million.

Climate

In general, New York State has warm summers and cold winters. The average temperature in New York City in August is 23 degrees Celsius,

while the average temperature in February is 0.6 degrees Celsius. In the Edirondack Mountains, the average temperatures in August and February are 17 degrees and minus 10 degrees respectively. The average rainfall across the state ranges from 81 centimeters to 137 centimeters. The average annual snowfall in New York City and the Edirondack Mountains is 66 centimeters and 310 centimeters respectively.

Culture

Many of the most famous performing arts centers in the United States are located in New York City, such as Lincoln Center (Lincoln

Center), Avery Feifei Center Avery Fisher Hall, Carnegie Hall,

and the Metropolitan Opera House. New York City is also home to the New York Philharmonic, the Metropolitan Opera, the New York City Ballet, the New York City Opera, and many other performing arts groups. Water

Cities such as Cowtown, Brooklyn, Long Island, Syracuse, Lochester, and Albany also have orchestras

New York City's theater district, including Broadway, hosts nearly a thousand premiere performances every year.

In addition, various parks in New York City also launch a number of performance activities every summer. Museums in New York City

are: Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, Gauguin Museum, American Museum of Natural History, Whitney Museum

American Indy Ann Museum, and the Brooklyn Museum. Other museums in the state include: Buffalo Museum of Science

Museum, Utica Children's Museum, Emerson Museum of Art in Syracuse, Farmers Museum in Cooperstown, Conn. >

The Glass Museum in Corning and the New York State Museum in Sunni.

Recreation

New York State has approximately 150 state parks and 60 state forests. Popular outdoor activities in the state include: hiking, camping, canoeing, rafting, horseback riding, golfing, sailing, swimming, backpacking, and pedaling

Cars, and skiing. The most popular scenic spots in New York City include: Statue of Liberty

National Monument, Brooklyn Bridge, Central Park,

Empire State Building, World Trade Center, United Nations

United Nations Headquarters, Times Square, Wall

< p>Street), and Rockefeller Center. Other places worth visiting in the state include:

The Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, Fort Diconderoga, and Game

< p>Battle of Retoga National Historical Park, and Schuyler Park State Historic District in Albany.

Others

New York State’s wholesale industry ranks first among the fifty states in the United States.

The number of bridges in New York City (2,100) is unmatched by other American cities. Celebrities produced by the state include: actor/director/writer/comedian Woody Allen, writer James Baldwin, the first black woman in the United States Representatives Shirley Chisholm

and the 22nd and 24th President of the United States Grover Cleveland

Cleveland ), composer Aaron Copland, actor Tom Cruise (Tom

Cruise), the 13th President of the United States Millard Fillmore, Actress Jody Foster, composer George Gershwin, writer Joseph Heller, writer Washington Irving, politician/playwright Clare

Clare Booth Luce, writer James Michener, playwright

Arthur Miller, writer Henry Miller, playwright Eugene O'Neill

Eugene O'Neill, industrialist/philanthropist John D. Rockefeller, Norman Rockwell, and Franklin Delano Ross, the 32nd President of the United States< /p>

Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th President of the United States

Roosevelt, scientist Jonas Salk, Folk composer/singer Pete Seeger

(Pete Seeger), playwright Neil Simon, social reformer Sojourner Toulouse

< p>(Sojourner Truth), Martin Van Buren, the eighth president of the United States, and poet Walt Whitman.