West Coast of the United States
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Image:US map-Pacific.PNG The "West Coast", "Western Seaboard", or "Pacific Seaboard" are terms for the westernmost coastal states of the Western United States, comprising most often California, Oregon and Washington. Arizona and Nevada, while not coastal states, are often included in the West Coast due to their proximity to the Pacific Coast and their economic and cultural ties to California. For certain purposes, all the cities stretching from Vancouver, Canada to Tijuana, Mexico are sometimes included.
While Arizona and Nevada are not coastal states, the urban centers of Las Vegas and Reno, Nevada, as well as Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona are significantly influenced by California culture and economic activity. Therefore, Arizona and Nevada are often considered part of the "West Coast." Although cities in Arizona and Nevada are inland, they share inclusion in the "West Coast" much like the inland cities of Eugene, Oregon, Sacramento, California, and Palm Springs, California.
The West Coast has also come to be deemed "The Coast", especially by New Yorkers, or the "Left Coast," a pun based on its lefthand position on a north-centric map of the US, as well as its reputation for being more politically liberal (or "leftist") than certain places on the East Coast or in the Midwestern United States. California is the core of the region. When the term "West Coast" is used by outsiders, more often than not it is in reference to California, or even more specifically, to Southern California.
The term has also been taken by hip hop culture when used to refer to a particular school of artists, such as Tupac Shakur.
[edit] See also
- Western United States
- Geography of the Western United States
- List of regions of the United States
- Pacific Coast
- Third Coast
| Geographic regions of the United States |
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| Central • Coastal States • Deep South • Upland South • East • East Coast • Great Basin • Gulf Coast • Mid-Atlantic • Midwest • Mountain States • New England • North • Northeast • Northwest • Pacific • South • South Atlantic • South Central • Southeast • Southwest • Upper Midwest • West • West Coast Multinational regions: Atlantic Northeast • Border States • Great Lakes • Great Plains • Pacific Northwest |

