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Alright thanks guys... I think I get it now. So basically Wales and Scotland are part of the UK, but are not English per se.
So Wales and Scotland are part of the UK, but act independantly from England? I'm sorry to keep asking questions but I kinda want to understand this.
I actually think I have a slight understanding of cricketAnd then, of course, there is the problem of explaining, to 'foreigners', the game of cricket.........!
SOD stitich, very nearly correct, except the original inhabitants were the Britons, not British.
The last survivors of these peoples, and therefore probably the true heirs to these islands (our 'redskins' if you like) are the Welsh, Ironically 'Welsh' means 'foreigners' in old English. The area of England where I live was also right on the border between the Anglo Saxon kingdoms and the Danelaw, many words in our common language today are Danish. If you have any interest in this whatsoever (the evolution of of our Language from prehistory to today) I recomment Melvyn Braggs 'The Adventure of English' as a damn good read. Not that it has anything to do with aeroplanes.
(actually the proper term is "damn Yankee")
You quoted one of my all time favourite films, bless you! Yes, you are correct and if you ever get get the chance to visit York (derived from the scandinavian Jorvik) grab it, you wont be disappointed.
Yes and of the four major English speaking groups that first settled in America, three were from England, the Puritans, the Royalists and the Quakers. The last and most numerous,arriving between 1700 and 1775, without which there may not have been the American Revolution, were the Borderers, mostly from Scotland and Ireland. Most of my ancestors were Borderers although a few were Royalists, arriving around 1640.