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Posted
I'm seriously asking this because I don't know: what is the difference...and don't get defensive brits, I seriously want to know.

Great Britain is an island, on it are Scotland, England, and Wales. The United Kingdom comprises those three on Great Britain plus Ulster, a.k.a. Northern Ireland. The British Isles comprise Great Britain, Ireland (even though Eire is not part of Britain or the UK, geographically, it is a British Isle), plus those little specks like the Isle of Man, the Channel Islands, and so on, which are protectorates of the British Crown, whose residents are caught in some half-British limbo, where they are British citizens, but not part of the United Kingdom. (It's their Puerto Rico.) Thus, all English are British, but not all British are English. Some British are Scottish, some identify as Cornish, some are Welsh. Northern Irish are just Irish, though their fellow countrymen are British, not Irish. The Manx are Manx, the Guernseymen Guernseymen, though as dependencies, most of their affairs are handled by the British.

You got the Irish bit the wrong way round the second time, but got it right the first time. All the British Isles, apart from Eire, are under the Queen's rule and British government.

 

The Cornish are English, but have their own language and stuff. Kind of like Hawaiians I guess. Or the Basque, but without the wish to become a seperate nation.

 

Technically, you've also got micronations like Sealand and The Kingdom of Lovely, but they're not legally recognised.

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Guest Oedipus Rex
Posted
I'm seriously asking this because I don't know: what is the difference...and don't get defensive brits, I seriously want to know.

Great Britain is an island, on it are Scotland, England, and Wales. The United Kingdom comprises those three on Great Britain plus Ulster, a.k.a. Northern Ireland. The British Isles comprise Great Britain, Ireland (even though Eire is not part of Britain or the UK, geographically, it is a British Isle), plus those little specks like the Isle of Man, the Channel Islands, and so on, which are protectorates of the British Crown, whose residents are caught in some half-British limbo, where they are British citizens, but not part of the United Kingdom. (It's their Puerto Rico.) Thus, all English are British, but not all British are English. Some British are Scottish, some identify as Cornish, some are Welsh. Northern Irish are just Irish, though their fellow countrymen are British, not Irish. The Manx are Manx, the Guernseymen Guernseymen, though as dependencies, most of their affairs are handled by the British.

You got the Irish bit the wrong way round the second time, but got it right the first time. All the British Isles, apart from Eire, are under the Queen's rule and British government.

As I understood it, a citizen of Ulster is a British citizen, but referred to as just Irish, like Scottish/Welsh/English, not Northern Irish.

Posted

Ah, my bad, got mixed up. Thought you were saying People from Eire were British.

 

Yeah, Northern Irish people I've known call themselves Irish, although they're refered to as Northern Irish.

Guest Oedipus Rex
Posted
Culturally, what (if any) is the difference between Northern Ireland and the rest of the island?

Most people in Northern Ireland are Protestants who are loyal to the Queen. However, some are Catholics who are loyal to Ireland, and they should just get out and stop killing the Protestants, lousy papist bastards.

Guest Tzar Lysergic
Posted

What's something extremely British that I should attempt to cook? I've never eaten anything that could be considered "English Food" other that the ubiquitous fish n chips.

 

Is trifle worth a damn?

Guest Oedipus Rex
Posted

Go north of Hadrian's Wall and fix yourself some haggis.

Guest Tzar Lysergic
Posted

Fuck that shit. I don't do innards, aside from sausage casing or the occasional liver.

Posted

Trifles are cool. A hotpot can be nice. Bangers and mash or toad in the hole is okay.

 

Alternatively, just put ketchup on everything.

Guest Oedipus Rex
Posted
Just put ketchup on everything.

Czech's Personal Hell

True story. And that's not just limited to my provincial views on hot dogs, I hate it everywhere. Shit's vile.

Posted
Ketchup rules.

 

You need it with pizza.

 

 

That's fucking repulsive.

Or lovely.

 

You need the ketchup to dip the crusts in at least.

Posted
catsup...or is that an American thing?

What is "catsup"?

 

It's bugged me ever since it was mentioned in an episode of The Simpsons.

I believe catsup is just an old way of spelling ketchup.

Guest Oedipus Rex
Posted

What? Where do you get ketchup on a pizza, other than a home for the mentally retarded? That's even worse than dipping it in ranch dressing, and that's pretty disgusting as it is.

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