I don't get it, why UK have three different names? And sometimes there's different flags, this is so confusing.
BTW I'm not from England/UK/Great Britain.
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I don't get it, why UK have three different names? And sometimes there's different flags, this is so confusing.
BTW I'm not from England/UK/Great Britain.
I don't get it, why UK have three different names? And sometimes there's different flags, this is so confusing.
BTW I'm not from England/UK/Great Britain.
stevoqwerty
Well thank god you're not from there because it would be a shame if you were and didn't know.:P I honestly think the UK is a couple of countries. As for Great Britain and England I have no diea why there are 2 names and I have no idea what British/English people would prefer so UK people start answering please lol
United Kingdom really stands for "The United Kingdom of Great Britan and Northern Ireland". That is England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland combined.
Great Britan is the Island in which England, Scotland, and Wales is on. Oh, and England is just one part of the UK.
BTW, England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland are all different countries that are combined parts of the United Kingdom.
Hope that clears things up.
Geographically, Great Britain is the name for the island on which the countries of England and Scotland are. The United Kingdom, or officially the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, is, as the name implies, the combination of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. England is only the country. That should clear things up. Oh and btw, google would have been quite happy to answer this question for you.MindFreeze
You totally forgot Wales. :o
[QUOTE="MindFreeze"]Geographically, Great Britain is the name for the island on which the countries of England and Scotland are. The United Kingdom, or officially the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, is, as the name implies, the combination of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. England is only the country. That should clear things up. Oh and btw, google would have been quite happy to answer this question for you.Hexagon_777
You totally forgot Wales. :o
Pssh, Wales... Haha, just kidding, okay I did forget about them.No its not. TC, you should know this seriously.Lrn2Geography.United Kingdom is the official country name.
cheesyjon
No its not.[QUOTE="Bitter_Altmer"][QUOTE="cheesyjon"]
United Kingdom is the official country name.
cheesyjon
What is, then? There's no England here.
England is a country. It is part of the United Kingdom (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales).[QUOTE="cheesyjon"][QUOTE="Bitter_Altmer"] No its not.MindFreeze
What is, then? There's no England here.
England is a country. It is part of the United Kingdom (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales).I don't know what to call England. It's not a state and it is pretty much a country, but the United Kingdom is the real country, so I really have no idea what England is considered.
England is a country. It is part of the United Kingdom (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales).[QUOTE="MindFreeze"][QUOTE="cheesyjon"]
What is, then? There's no England here.
cheesyjon
I don't know what to call England. It's not a state and it is pretty much a country, but the United Kingdom is the real country, so I really have no idea what England is considered.
I just told you... England is a country. The United Kingdom is quite simply a kingdom of several countries (again, England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales). Each of these is considered an actual country, but politically, they are ruled by the same government and monarchy.[QUOTE="cheesyjon"][QUOTE="MindFreeze"] England is a country. It is part of the United Kingdom (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales).MindFreeze
I don't know what to call England. It's not a state and it is pretty much a country, but the United Kingdom is the real country, so I really have no idea what England is considered.
I just told you... England is a country. The United Kingdom is quite simply a kingdom of several countries (again, England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales). Each of these is considered an actual country, but politically, they are ruled by the same government and monarchy.Yes, but United Kingdom is the country. I don't see how a country can be 4 countries. It is a good point, though.
[QUOTE="killerfist"]Wait..doesn't great brittain refer to the great brittish empire? Including all colonies and stuff? UK for the countries England, Scotland, northern Ireland and Wales, and england just the country england?MindFreezeNo, what you mean is the the Commonwealth. Btw, news flash, the British Empire doesn't exist anymore. :P Great Britain is the geographic island on which the countries of England and Scotland are. Politically, it also includes Wales. I know, a huge mess of confusion.
Ya, and Great Britain is what they use in the Olympics. The Olympics also includes Hong Kong, which isn't an exact country, though, so the Olympics does do some different than official stuff.
England - A country in Great Britain and the United Kingdom.
Great Britain - England, Scotland, Wales.
United Kingdom - England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland
[QUOTE="Doom_HellKnight"]
United Kingdom - England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland
cheesyjon
Yes, but it is the official country.
I am aware of what is what, seeing as how I live there... ;) I'm simply clearing it up the differences for the TC.The United Kingdom is Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales and England. (Today this does not include the Republic of Ireland). Note that this is defined as a Kingdom and not as a country.
England is the country. This does not include Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland. The name originating from anglo-saxon heritage. You will not find Welshman or Scots ever refer to themselves as Englishman. (Though they may be defined as British).
Great Britain is the geographical landmass of England, Wales and Scotland (Ireland - Eire is a seperate island). This is named just as Europe is the continental landmass which is made up of several nations/countries. I believe this may be named based on the Briton people (I can't define clearly. but I think it goes back past the time of the Romans).
I'm from Australia, sheesh, Haven't any of you watched Braveheart or Michal Collins? :shock:
[QUOTE="cheesyjon"]
[QUOTE="Doom_HellKnight"]
United Kingdom - England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland
Doom_HellKnight
Yes, but it is the official country.
I am aware of what is what, seeing as how I live there... ;) I'm simply clearing it up the differences for the TC.Ok. You must have an accent. And if you have an accent, do you think it's Americans that have the accents and you consider yourself not to have an accent?
What is, then? There's no England here.
I'm glad to be able to be present and give you a reading lesson.Because just beside that word we call "country" is a thing we call a "slash" (/) and beyond that "slash" is the word "territory" which the United Kingdom falls under.[QUOTE="Doom_HellKnight"][QUOTE="cheesyjon"]Yes, but it is the official country.cheesyjonI am aware of what is what, seeing as how I live there... ;) I'm simply clearing it up the differences for the TC.Ok. You must have an accent. And if you have an accent, do you think it's Americans that have the accents and you consider yourself not to have an accent?
Everybody on the planet speaks in different accents and dialects.
What's this Wales? How come we never hear about it? X360PS3AMD05Wales is a small country in the United Kingdom. Famous for it's sheep. :P
The United Kingdom is Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales and England. (Today this does not include the Republic of Ireland). Note that this is defined as a Kingdom and not as a country.
England is the country. This does not include Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland. The name originating from anglo-saxon heritage. You will not find Welshman or Scots ever refer to themselves as Englishman. (Though they may be defined as British).
Great Britain is the geographical landmass of England, Wales and Scotland (Ireland - Eire is a seperate island). This is named just as Europe is the continental landmass which is made up of several nations/countries. I believe this may be named based on the Briton people (I can't define clearly. but I think it goes back past the time of the Romans).
I'm from Australia, sheesh, Haven't any of you watched Braveheart or Michal Collins? :shock:
Foxhound_AU
no offence but what does Braveheart have to do with this lol ? that was like 400 years before the act of union of 1707 ? .
Well, the UK means the United Kingdom of Great Britain (and Northern Ireland), so you can use UK and Great Britain interchangeably. As for England, that's the dominant country in the Union (Westminster Parliament is sovereign), that said, it is only one part of the Union along with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Hope it's clear now TC.
UK and Great Britain aren't interchangeable. UK includes Northern Ireland....Great Britain just the major island (England, Scotland, and Wales). And of course, England is one of the countries that make up the other two.Well, the UK means the United Kingdom of Great Britain (and Northern Ireland), so you can use UK and Great Britain interchangeably. As for England, that's the dominant country in the Union (Westminster Parliament is sovereign), that said, it is only one part of the Union along with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Hope it's clear now TC.
T_P_O
[QUOTE="T_P_O"]UK and Great Britain aren't interchangeable. UK includes Northern Ireland....Great Britain just the major island (England, Scotland, and Wales). And of course, England is one of the countries that make up the other two. The official name of the Union is the "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland". If we just shorten it to the UK (short of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland), we include "Great Britain and Northern Ireland" anyway. Coming from a native, we just use it interchangeably, so it's no big deal.Well, the UK means the United Kingdom of Great Britain (and Northern Ireland), so you can use UK and Great Britain interchangeably. As for England, that's the dominant country in the Union (Westminster Parliament is sovereign), that said, it is only one part of the Union along with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Hope it's clear now TC.
LJS9502_basic
[QUOTE="MindFreeze"]Geographically, Great Britain is the name for the island on which the countries of England and Scotland are. The United Kingdom, or officially the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, is, as the name implies, the combination of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. England is only the country. That should clear things up. Oh and btw, google would have been quite happy to answer this question for you.Hexagon_777
You totally forgot Wales. :o
Its a sin :o[QUOTE="LJS9502_basic"][QUOTE="T_P_O"]UK and Great Britain aren't interchangeable. UK includes Northern Ireland....Great Britain just the major island (England, Scotland, and Wales). And of course, England is one of the countries that make up the other two. The official name of the Union is the "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland". If we just shorten it to the UK (short of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland), we include "Great Britain and Northern Ireland" anyway. Coming from a native, we just use it interchangeably, so it's no big deal.I'm aware of the official name...but Great Britain is the island....and doesn't include No. Ireland...so while you may use something interchangeably...that doesn't mean it should be nor that it is, in fact, interchangeable.Well, the UK means the United Kingdom of Great Britain (and Northern Ireland), so you can use UK and Great Britain interchangeably. As for England, that's the dominant country in the Union (Westminster Parliament is sovereign), that said, it is only one part of the Union along with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Hope it's clear now TC.
T_P_O
I don't know what to call England. It's not a state and it is pretty much a country, but the United Kingdom is the real country, so I really have no idea what England is considered.cheesyjon
Ok. You must have an accent. And if you have an accent, do you think it's Americans that have the accents and you consider yourself not to have an accent?cheesyjonWhat the hell are you going on about.
This thread is ****ing awful, even by OT standards. Christ. [QUOTE="cheesyjon"]Ok. You must have an accent. And if you have an accent, do you think it's Americans that have the accents and you consider yourself not to have an accent?Darwin_AwardWhat the hell are you going on about.
I'm asking a question to the one guy.
[QUOTE="cheesyjon"]I'm glad to be able to be present and give you a reading lesson.Because just beside that word we call "country" is a thing we call a "slash" (/) and beyond that "slash" is the word "territory" which the United Kingdom falls under.What is, then? There's no England here.
Bitter_Altmer
That's true, but a country is a territory. Territories aren't always countries, but countries are always territories.
I thought England is a part of the Great Britain/United Kingdom, which is actually England, Wales, Scotland and north Ireland in one.
Crimsader
Only the United Kingdom fits that description. Great Britain is just like the United Kingdom but without Northern Ireland.
[QUOTE="Bitter_Altmer"][QUOTE="cheesyjon"]
What is, then? There's no England here.
I'm glad to be able to be present and give you a reading lesson.Because just beside that word we call "country" is a thing we call a "slash" (/) and beyond that "slash" is the word "territory" which the United Kingdom falls under.That's true, but a country is a territory. Territories aren't always countries, but countries are always territories.
lulz Don't act stupid.I don't consider England to be a real country any more. When they formed the union I'm sure it was but now it's not. Scotland and Wales have some independence but I think most decisions are made in the Parliament of UK. Wales and England share the same laws. The UK have one currency and one central bank. They share seats in the EU parliament and the European Council. Therefore Wales is as much of a nation as Bavaria or Texas are. But then the British are known for how little sense their way of thinking does. For example 12 inches makes 1 foot. 3 feet are 1 yard, 220 makes one furlong, 80 furlongs makes 1 mile(have fun calculating volume scale!).
I don't think UK has won a single cross-country skiing competition or a ice hockey championship but from what I've heard they play a lot of football(sometimes they say that they even invented it). Let them believe that they are three separate countries which needs to have separate football teams splitting talents. As long as UK or Italy doesn't win the world cup I'm happy.
Besides England/UK isn't really a problem compared with USA. What are you supposed to call it's inhabitants? Americans? No since America consists of two continents and 35 countries. United states of Americans sound weird USAans is no good either and this has now been a problem for 300 years now.
What's this Wales? How come we never hear about it? X360PS3AMD05LoL fail
Was the flag thing a serious question?Didn't anyone read my OP? :?
taj7575
How many times haven't you said Holland when you're supposed to say the Neatherlands?Yeah, that all depends on which country a person is refering too..I hate it when somebody refers to the entire country as just 'England' - Usually seen in American movies.
I'm Welsh. =DMushroomWig
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