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Re: OT, sorry
It's different in the uk. Everyone is Scottish, English, Welsh etc before british i think. It's certainly the case for most scots.Scotland have their own laws and parliament that only affect scotland, but the parliament in London still has control over scotland in some matters. Every MP (member of parliament) can vote on a law that will only effect england and wales but the MP could be scottish. The law may affect scotland indirectly by altering their budget for something or more people applying to scottish universities.In some ways it's like the USA but it is still very different. We aren't all english just because we're brittish. We all have the same queen and so were unified which in turn led us all to have the same government.Ann
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Although some people from Wales would call themselves British, as would some people from England, some from Scotland, and some from Northern Ireland, I think most of us would call ourselves English, or Welsh, or Scottish, etc primarily. I know that I *am* British, but I identify *more* with being English.
Having just spoken to my boyfriend (geography buff, lol) I can tell you that while Wales IS a country, Great Britain ISN'T. England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland are the countries which make up Britain. Britain is a geographical region.
And, just to make it even more confusing, the British Isles are the four countries already mentioned, plus Southern Ireland (Eire), and that refers to the whole island group, so tiny little islands like Orkney and the Scilly Isles are also part of the British Isles.
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