Losser
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Losser
Summary
Losser is a village[1]. Losser has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Losser is located in Losser[3].
- Losser is in the country of Netherlands[4].
- Losser's instance of is recorded as village[5].
- Losser's instance of is recorded as cadastral populated place in the Netherlands[6].
- Losser's shares border with is recorded as Oldenzaal[7].
- Losser's twinned administrative body is recorded as Vidnoye[8].
- Losser's Commons category is recorded as Losser[9].
- Losser's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 377699[10].
- Losser's located in time zone is recorded as UTC+01:00[11].
- Losser's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 52.263008, 'longitude': 7.004, 'precision': 1e-05}[12].
- Losser's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Twente[13].
- Losser's BAG residence ID is recorded as 1713[14].
- Losser's MusicBrainz area ID is recorded as e3584212-0811-4f56-93a6-2624df56e57d[15].
- Losser's capital of is recorded as Losser[16].
- Losser's list of monuments is recorded as Rijksmonumenten in Losser[17].
- Losser's demonym is recorded as Lossernaar[18].
- Losser's demonym is recorded as Lossenaar[19].
- Losser's GeoNames ID is recorded as 2751424[20].
- Losser's GNS Unique Feature ID is recorded as -2148865[21].
- Losser's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/120kyzcd[22].
- Losser's Who's on First ID is recorded as 101807147[23].
- Losser's FactGrid item ID is recorded as Oscar Berger-Levrault[24].
- Losser's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007524774405171[25].
- Losser's RKD thesaurus ID is recorded as 2263[26].
- Losser's WikiKids ID is recorded as Losser_(plaats)[27].
Body
Geography
Losser is in the country of Netherlands[4]. Losser is located in Losser[3].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include village[5] and cadastral populated place in the Netherlands[6].
Why It Matters
Losser has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]