By 'south of the Rio Grande', I mean 'into Mexico' rather than 'anywhere south of 31N' - I thought this was standard usage, but various of my friends in Cambridge interpreted it the other way.
I've been to Australia and New Zealand (work trip back in the 1980s), so the count I put in the poll is correct at least by your definition.
(I'm pretty sure Australia was an island when I was in gradeschool. I'm absolutely sure that I bought a photo book called Australia: The Biggest Island while I was there, since I still have it.)
It's a continent in Jules Verne's 1867 In Search of Castaways/Children of Captain Grant.
No controversy is mentioned on the wikipedia page (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australia_%28continent%29), though "the island continent" is included as a literary synonym.
Conventionally, Australia the continent includes Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea. New Zealand's got its own submerged continent, Zealandia, but they can be bundled together as Australasia.
Of course, I grew up in USSR thinking of Iceland as part of Europe and Jamaica as part of North America, so all these definitions are pretty wobbly.
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Date: 2010-03-31 03:02 pm (UTC)(I'm pretty sure Australia was an island when I was in gradeschool. I'm absolutely sure that I bought a photo book called Australia: The Biggest Island while I was there, since I still have it.)
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Date: 2010-03-31 03:21 pm (UTC)Rather unfair to Tasmania et al, that. Although I suppose The Australian Mainland: The Biggest Island doesn't really scan.
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Date: 2010-03-31 06:54 pm (UTC)No controversy is mentioned on the wikipedia page (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australia_%28continent%29), though "the island continent" is included as a literary synonym.
Conventionally, Australia the continent includes Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea. New Zealand's got its own submerged continent, Zealandia, but they can be bundled together as Australasia.
Of course, I grew up in USSR thinking of Iceland as part of Europe and Jamaica as part of North America, so all these definitions are pretty wobbly.