Continental United States
The continental United States refers (except sometimes in U.S. federal law and regulations) to the largest part of the U.S. that is delimited by a continuous border.
Related Topics:
U.S. federal law and regulations - U.S.
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Specifically, this includes 48 states and the federal capital of the U.S., the District of Columbia; it excludes Alaska and Hawaii.
Related Topics:
States - District of Columbia - Alaska - Hawaii
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The continental United States is also used in its more literal sense to refer to those 48 states plus Alaska.
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The 48 states + DC are also referred to as:
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- the contiguous states (abbreviated in various specialized contexts as "CONUS"),
- the conterminous or coterminous states,
- the "lower 48"
- in Hawaii, as "the mainland" or "the continent", and
- in Alaska, as "outside".
- no collection of states includes the District of Columbia.
- "conterminous" and "coterminous" are rare, somewhat technical words. In addition, they are more generally used in the sense of having fully coincident boundaries. That is, the County of Hawaii and the Island of Hawaii are conterminous, and the eastern border of Arizona in conterminous with the western border of New Mexico, but it is inaccurate to say that Arizona and New Mexico are "conterminous" without some such clarification.
- while Hawaii is not part of any continent, Alaska is clearly, like the contiguous states, part of North America, and excluding it from the "continental U.S." must be described as a misnomer.
All of these have some shortcoming of logic, ambiguity, or excessive or deficient formality. In particular:
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It is sometimes objected that since, for example, Oregon and Maryland are neither "contiguous" nor "conterminous", that these words are inappropriate to describe the whole main area of the US. However, the phrase Contiguous United States is entirely in keeping with the general use of the word "contiguous", as in Long rows of contiguous houses or the contiguous colors of the rainbow. In addition, "conterminous" is occasionally used in the same broad sense, as in Allied species, whose ranges are separate but conterminous. In the case of the US states, the disambiguating word "separate" would not be necessary. (Examples from the OED.)
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