Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Which cities in China are the domestic status of the United States?

Which cities in China are the domestic status of the United States?

Comparison of urban status between the United States and China (if there is no complete one-to-one correspondence, for example, Washington, D.C., the capital of the United States, and Beijing, the capital of China, cannot correspond. Washington is small, and Beijing is one of the largest cities in China and a first-tier city, so it can only be roughly graded. If there is a similar city, please mention it):

American first-tier cities: new york, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston; China's first tier cities: Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen. Among them, new york is most like Shanghai (one of the largest port cities, financial centers and gateways), and Houston is most like Shenzhen (a rising star with developed tertiary industry in the south).

American second-tier cities: Philadelphia, San Francisco, San Jose, San Diego, Austin, San Antonio, Dallas, Atlanta, Miami, Denver and Boston; Second-tier cities in China: Tianjin, Chengdu, Hangzhou, Chongqing, Wuhan, Xi, Nanjing and Suzhou. Among them, Philadelphia is the most like Nanjing (one of the few historical cities in the United States, the former capital); San Francisco+San Jose is most like Hangzhou (San Francisco bend vs Hangzhou Bay, high-tech center, pleasant climate); Chongqing and Chengdu are a bit like San Antonio and Austin (not far away, with their own cultural characteristics, high temperature in summer and spicy food); Atlanta is a bit like Wuhan (transportation hub, leading in its own state/province, surpassing all other cities).

Third-tier cities in the United States: Phoenix, Seattle, Detroit, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Milwaukee, Baltimore, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Buffalo, Oklahoma City, St. Louis and New Orleans; Domestic third-tier cities: Shenyang, Changchun, Harbin, Shijiazhuang, Zhengzhou, Lanzhou, Xining, Taiyuan, Jinan, Dalian, Qingdao, Fuzhou, Xiamen, Changsha, Nanchang and Urumqi. Among them, Detroit is similar to Changchun and Shenyang (once brilliant but now declining old industrial zone, cold in winter); Las Vegas is a bit like Urumqi (in a sparsely populated area, the style is a bit different from the mainstream area); New Orleans is a bit like Qingdao (an important seaport with a strong European exotic flavor); Salt Lake City is a bit like Xining (the western mountainous highland is an important regional center and one of the core areas of minority culture, close to a big lake); St Louis is similar to Zhengzhou (the core city on the Great Plains, the "Mother River" near their respective countries, and has been the Indian/China cultural center since ancient times).

American fourth-tier cities: Portland, Grimbe, Toledo, Rochester, Montgomery, Norfolk, Syracuse, Louisville, etc. Fourth-tier cities in China: Baoding, Chengde, Sanya, Baotou, Zigong, Yanbian, Xuzhou, Lianyungang and Luoyang.