South American Games
0 sources
South American Games
Summary
South American Games is a recurring sporting event[1]. It draws 84 Wikipedia views per month (recurring_sporting_event category, ranking #296 of 2,353).[2]
Key Facts
- South American Games's instance of is recorded as recurring sporting event[3].
- South American Games's logo image is recorded as Flag of ODESUR.svg[4].
- South American Games's subclass of is recorded as multi-sport event[5].
- South American Games's subclass of is recorded as international competition[6].
- South American Games's Commons category is recorded as South American Games[7].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 1978 Southern Cross Games[8].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 1982 Southern Cross Games[9].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 1986 South American Games[10].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 1990 South American Games[11].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 1994 South American Games[12].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 1998 South American Games[13].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 2002 South American Games[14].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 2006 South American Games[15].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 2010 South American Games[16].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 2014 South American Games[17].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 2018 South American Games[18].
- South American Games's has part is recorded as 2022 South American Games[19].
- +1978-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of South American Games[20].
- South American Games's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0fp4vj[21].
- South American Games's topic's main category is recorded as Category:South American Games[22].
- South American Games's event interval is recorded as {'unit': 'Q577', 'amount': '+4'}[23].
Why It Matters
South American Games draws 84 Wikipedia views per month (recurring_sporting_event category, ranking #296 of 2,353).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24]