because if they do it for the UK then they have to do it with every of bloody country and that just wastes time and productivity which they could be directing elsewhere,what about all the european countries that dont have it?Captain Pancake said:You're right! I should be able to display my scottish nationality with pride! what's 4 extra countries anyway?
No, they're part of the United Kingdom. The majority of people in Northern Ireland would consider themselves British (or they ought to, since that's what's on their passports). Geographically, it's all the Britsh Isles.HerrBobo said:Eh, no. N. Ireland is part of an Island called Ireland, how the the hell are they British? They are Irish.
Yes they are part of the UK but they are Irish part of the Island of Ireland, not British. UK and British are not the same.Dr_Matt said:No, they're part of the United Kingdom. The majority of people in Northern Ireland would consider themselves British (or they ought to, since that's what's on their passports). Geographically, it's all the Britsh Isles.HerrBobo said:Eh, no. N. Ireland is part of an Island called Ireland, how the the hell are they British? They are Irish.
Typical Yank. Ireland is no more owned by Britain the the US is.2012 Wont Happen said:Scotland, Ireland, and Wales are owned by Britain. So no.
Geographical location doesn't come into this - if you want to argue the point, it's all the British Isles. From a legal standpoint, those folk born in England, Northern Ireland, Wales, Scotland are all British.HerrBobo said:Yes they are part of the UK but they are Irish part of the Island of Ireland, not British. UK and British are not the same.
They are usually grouped together as UK or United Kingdom, since well, they all fall under the United Kingdom...IRBaboon said:Is it just me, probably is, but I hate the fact that all sites only give us the option of United Kingdom, should it not give us the option to choose between England, Scotland, Northern Ireland or Wales? Each of these are individual countries, aren't they?
Yes, well I use the term North Adlantic Archipelago.Dr_Matt said:Geographical location doesn't come into this - if you want to argue the point, it's all the British Isles. From a legal standpoint, those folk born in England, Northern Island, Wales, Scotland are all British.HerrBobo said:Yes they are part of the UK but they are Irish part of the Island of Ireland, not British. UK and British are not the same.
Technically, most of these website menus are wrong - country should be United Kingdom, nationality is British.
I'm not getting dragged into an argument over whether Northern Ireland should be part of the UK or not, just stating the fact that it is.HerrBobo said:I agree with you that people born in N. Ireland are subject to British rule but they are not British. Its N. Ireland, the clue is in the name.
Well, I never said otherwise. N. Ireland is part of the UK. I was debating weather or not it was British.Dr_Matt said:I'm not getting dragged into an argument over whether Northern Ireland should be part of the UK or not, just stating the fact that it is.HerrBobo said:I agree with you that people born in N. Ireland are subject to British rule but they are not British. Its N. Ireland, the clue is in the name.
yeah i started speaking Irish regularly just a couple of weeks ago just to freak my foreign friends out. but you doing good your self. (oh and just between you and me, my message that i wrote in Gaelic was only like 1/2 made proper sense. it works but it just doesn't make sense at first) Slán Go foill.KBKarma said:Dia dhuit. I had to get an exemption before I sat the JC, so I don't understand some of that. I got half of it, but that's about all, sorry.hippykiller said:déan mar a dhéanaimse an fear seo folláin is maith liom Béarla? a ionraic smaoinigh gan mhoill. now that was an example of another language spoken in the British isles.Link Kadeshi said:They all speak English, right?
Northern Ireland, England, and Scotland have their own paper money. Same currency, different notes. Though many places in Northern Ireland, especially near the border, accept Euros as well.hubertw47 said:You take Euros?social_outcast said:we take Irish notes
Go raibh míle maith agat.kailsar said:It's pronounced gaah-lik, rather than gay-lik.KBKarma said:Actually, them up North speak Irish (Gaeilge), and them in Scotland speak Scottish (Gàidhlig, and I'd like to know how that differs from the Irish pronounciation).
Ah, I misunderstood your meaning. While NI is not part of Great Britain, the nationality is still British. Anyone born in the UK is a British subject.HerrBobo said:Well, I never said otherwise. N. Ireland is part of the UK. I was debating weather or not it was British.