Clinamenic
Binary & Tweed
I still have enough humanity in me to feel bad about such snarkiness, but at the same time it is rather fun.
Absolutely true. There's a pretty good joke about this in In the Loop.The average American has no idea there's a difference between English and British; use England and UK interchangeably.
Absolutely true. There's a pretty good joke about this in In the Loop.
But is that one even unique to Americans? I guess - and granted I don't have evidence either way - that most people outside of the UK, current/former Commonwealth countries, and possibly Western Europe have the same confusion. And tbf it's a more nuanced difference than most ignorant Americanisms. Having one word to refer to the government and citizens of a united kingdom and other words to refer to the different nationalities making up the constituent parts of that kingdom is not the most clear setup.
The real common American mass culture misconceptions about England are probably more of Victorian/Edwardian-era stiff upper lip aristocrats a la Downton Abbey,
None of the Irish people I've ever met have been the sort to get annoyed about Ireland (the island) being considered part of the British Isles, because it's a geographic term, not a political one. I've seen the kind of Americans who like getting offended on other people's behalf call it "the North Atlantic Archipelago", which apart from being extremely unwieldy, is also very imprecise, and could be applied to any island group from the Faroes to the Azores.One thing I noticed when you're selecting a language is it's often described as UK or British, or represented with a union flag. So yeah in short.
But it's quite confusing, I bet a lot of Brits don't know the difference between the UK and Great Britain and the British Isles.... in fact I have to think.
UK stands for The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland so presumably, strictly speaking, Northern Ireland is not part of Great Britain. And I guess if you said The British Isles - which is maybe a less technical term - then it means the island with England, Scotland and Wales and the other island with both Irelands on it... so seems to imply that Eire is part of the British Isles which seems kinda controversial.
Natural superiority, duh.The British Aren’t Coming. They’re Here.
As a historic presidential election looms, several of America’s largest and most powerful newsrooms are now being led by English journalists. Why?
Absolutely true. There's a pretty good joke about this in In the Loop.
But is that one even unique to Americans? I guess - and granted I don't have evidence either way - that most people outside of the UK, current/former Commonwealth countries, and possibly Western Europe have the same confusion. And tbf it's a more nuanced difference than most ignorant Americanisms. Having one word to refer to the government and citizens of a united kingdom and other words to refer to the different nationalities making up the constituent parts of that kingdom is not the most clear setup.
Just converted all 85 federalist papers into markdown and brought them into obsidian:
View attachment 19403