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Flag Work Notes Abou-Yamen The Under-Gifted (1980) A country in the Middle East. Its name is inspired by Abu Dhabi (city in the UAE) and Yemen. [1] Absurdistan: Politische Studien (1971) [2] An imaginary land in which absurdity is the norm, especially in its public authorities and government. [3] Absurdistan, Republic of Absurdistan by Gary ...
Angria: imaginary country from the poems of the Brontë sisters. Arcacia: mythical kingdom in the film A Royal Family; Ardistan: from the novel Ardistan and Dschinnistan by Karl Friedrich May; Aslan: from anime Area 88. Sometimes also transliterated Asran.
Grünewald: an imaginary Germanic state where the novel Prince Otto (1885) by Robert Louis Stevenson is set. Guilder: one of the fictional principalities in William Goldman's The Princess Bride. Gyenorvya: A fictional small European country hosting EuropeVision, (a parody of EuroVision) in the Netflix Series Q-Force.
Nayak: imaginary West African country in the 2004 film La Nuit de la vérité (Night of Truth) Neranga: "new African country" featured in a Rumpole story called "Rumpole and the Golden Thread" by John Mortimer; NetFrica : East african nation from the Mega Man Battle Network series who worships an irrigation computer as a water god [14]
Listenbourg is a fictional country created as the subject of an internet meme in October 2022, which depicts it as an extension of the Iberian Peninsula. [1] [2] [3] French Twitter user Gaspard Hoelscher shared a doctored map of Europe with a red arrow pointing to the outline of a pasted country adjacent to Portugal and Spain, and joked that Americans would not be able to name the country.
Map of the Land of Oz, the fictional country in the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Fictitious countries from the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. A fictional country is a country that is made up for fictional stories, and does not exist in real life, or one that people believe in without proof.
This is a list of flags, arranged by design, serving as a navigational aid for identifying a given flag.Uncharged flags are flags that either are solid or contain only rectangles, squares and crosses but no crescents, circles, stars, triangles, maps, flags, coats of arms or other objects or symbols.
A flag of this type should not be added to any articles or pages unless it is officially proposed by a government agency, covered by the media, or sees notable local use. Description Imaginary flag of the Donets-Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic.svg