I'm going to be moving from Orange County, California, to Oklahoma City. I was wondering what it would be like there. Climate, schools, etc. Hopefully, I'll be able to adapt without any harsh conditions. Thanks. -jessebearx3
Other - United States - 8 Answers
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1 :
Oklahoma State
2 :
well my mums family lives there. It's very flat and they have Buffaloes...they have a really cool mall though.
3 :
The reason I even took the time to look at this question is how you totally have horrible english in the title.
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Well they have this weird language quirk there...in Oklahoma City they always use the word "What" where other people would use the word "How". It's really hard to get used to to....like instead of saying, "How is your name?"...in Oklahoma City they would say "What".
5 :
I used to live there. It is pretty great. I only went to 1st and 2nd grade there, but school was okay. The climate was great. Hot in the summer, cold in the winter, how I think it should be. It snows a couple of inches in the winter. You should be fine.
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I DONT KNOW IM FROM MELBOURNE AUS FROM WHAT I HAVE SEEN ON LIKE CNN AND YANKEE NEWS PROGRAMS YOUR HOUSE WILL GET RIPPED UP BY A TORNADO
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its nice. they have great schools. the level of education is high. people there are very friendly and you should be able to make a lot of friends. the housing is good. there are up scale neighborhoods in the outer cities(ie moore). the climate is extremely hot and humid. expect to roast(the thermometer may not read high but its the humidity).hope this helps
8 :
You will find the climate and geography radically different from what you've known. The land is flat and the horizon seems to go on forever--it is part of the Great Plains. And the wind DOES come "sweeping down the plain." I spent six weeks during the summer (and there it's SUMMER) in OK and visited OK City more than once. On my first trip in July it was 104%, shade was as scarce as hen's teeth downtown, and the wind was 60 m.p.h. I stepped out of an air-conditioned building and the sweat popped out on me like silver bullets, and then I stepped out of the entrance foyer. The humidity was about 11%, and that wind scoured the perspiration off me in less than three seconds. But the state has a very interesting history (I was even given a Cherokee name!), the people are very down-to-earth and friendly, and as the state capital the city is more sophisticated than you might think--right down to an NBA team. I know little about secondary schools, but the universities are much better than respectable. You'll have a chance to be yourself amid unpretentious and good people. But tornadoes ARE a fact of life there.