Mainland
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This article is about the geomorphological/geopolitical term; MAINLAND is also a cheese brand owned by Fonterra, a New Zealand dairy company.
Mainland is usually the continental part of a region, as opposed to the islands nearby. Sometimes the residents are called "the Mainlanders". As a result of the usually larger area of mainland, there are significantly more mainlanders than islanders, and mainlander culture and politics sometimes threaten to dominate those of the islands.
Prominent uses of the term include:
- Mainland China, as opposed to the areas of the Republic of China (Taiwan), Hong Kong and Macau (but including the island of Hainan);
- Mainland Canada, as opposed to Newfoundland or Victoria Island;
- Mainland Finland, as opposed to Åland Islands;
- Continental United States ("The Mainland"), as opposed to Hawaii and Alaska;
- Mainland Japan and Honshu, as opposed to the rest of the Japanese islands;
- the South Island of New Zealand, which, though having a far smaller population, is slightly larger than the North Island; It also came into existence before the North Island according to Māori legend.
- the Nova Scotian mainland, as opposed to Cape Breton Island;
- Mainland United Kingdom (i.e. Great Britain), as opposed to the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man, Northern Ireland or any other British island. Usually in Great Britain, and sometimes in Ireland, mainland Europe is referred to as The Continent.
- Mainland Ireland as opposed to its offshore islands. Note that "the mainland" in Northern Ireland is ambiguous between this sense and the preceding one; using the phrase to mean "Great Britain as opposed to Northern Ireland" is considered offensive by many Nationalists.
- The largest islands of the Orkney and Shetland Islands; see The Mainland, Orkney and Shetland Mainland.
The term is used on multiple levels. To someone in Tasmania, continental Australia is the mainland; but to residents of King Island, Flinders Island, and the other surrounding islands, Tasmania itself is the mainland.