Zero Cool said:Source?
CalcuoCuchicheo said:I've heard it said about a million times on Scotland Today (our news show) & the most recent time I heard it was yesterday so I'm hardly tripping. I might try & find you a specific source at some point & I'd expect the source to be a government report since our official news programmes use the statistic.
And before people start sending money here, remember it's the Western definition of poverty.
Edit: Well gave you about 3 minutes of my time.
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/news/2000/10/se2681.asp?showdate=01 October 2000
http://www.geocities.com/joe_middleton_sco/political.htm
http://www.scotsindependent.org/features/talking3.htm
Arent they?TecK NeeX said:1 in 3 Americans believe England, Britain and U.K are different countries

Well they're not interchangeable terms, but they're not three separate countries.haunted said:Arent they?![]()
Illuminattile said:Well they're not interchangeable terms, but they're not three separate countries.
England is England.
Great Britain is England, Scotland and Wales.
The UK is Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
didnt know thatIlluminattile said:Well they're not interchangeable terms, but they're not three separate countries.
England is England.
Great Britain is England, Scotland and Wales.
The UK is Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

critikaldesignz said:What if we say British and we are refering them as people in the British Isles, will the Irish be confused?

British refers to people of Britain. People from Ireland aren't British. There's no umbrella term for people from the UK.critikaldesignz said:What if we say British and we are refering them as people in the British Isles, will the Irish be confused?
Illuminattile said:"The British Isles" isn't a term the Irish like very much. Implies that the isles belong to Britain.