As a United Statesian, that bothers me a bit as well.
Joel Send a noteboard - 24/11/2012 01:45:54 PM
But very few Scots will let you away with calling them English. It's similar to how Canadians get annoyed when people mistake them for Americans.
Actually, we don't mind so much been called Americans or at least North Americans (no more than German or French mind much being referred to as Europeans). Well, franco-canadians from Québec don't give a damn about this anyway as our sense of cultural identity is as strong as the Americans' and we don't mind the association to the USA, but I do know some anglo-canadians who do get more irritated than us when called Americans - as to them it's perceived more as making nothing of the differences between their culture and the American one.
What a lot of Canadians and South-Americans mind a bit is that the term American became widely used in reference to citizens of the USA when it was the only country on the continent (the rest were colonies) and it never got changed when this no longer reflected reality and it became usual to refer to continental groups in geopolitics.
And thus you end up with people oddly minding to be called by their continent's name when it's proper to do it, and modern historians and some of the more "serious" media insisting to refer to Americans as "États-Uniens" (I don't know that an usual English alternative name for American beside "US citizen" exists - never heard it if it does - this may well be a Québec + South American thing only. French has another alternative way around it, as rather than use Americans/North-South-Americans in the continental context, we use an expression that in English would be "the people of the Americas" - weird sounding in English but not in French).
Since, of course, the term "American" properly refers to any and all residents of two entire continents. Unfortunately, there is no convenient demonym appropriate for US citizens. The UK actually does offer a good parallel here, since its demonym is usually "British" just as our is "American," even though both terms technically encompass far more territory (and thus people) than just the nations they are respectively understood to indicate. Referring to "United Kingdomers" and "United Staters" would just be awkward.
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Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!

LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
So, I found this video explaining the differences between The UK, Great Britain, England, etc.
19/11/2012 07:18:13 PM
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Great Britain is an island containing England, Scotland and Wales.
19/11/2012 08:07:35 PM
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Is that why Andy Murray is getting credit for being British? *NM*
19/11/2012 08:46:45 PM
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Ideally, yes; most likely, no.
19/11/2012 08:55:22 PM
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They keep saying "the first British man to win a Grand Slam title since 1938"
19/11/2012 10:12:44 PM
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Mostly that's an indication of just how desperate they were before that happened.
19/11/2012 10:30:40 PM
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Plus he is British
19/11/2012 10:49:38 PM
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I do believe I said so in my post, yes.
19/11/2012 11:00:05 PM
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Barely so, I would say.
19/11/2012 11:14:08 PM
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But Scotland is a different country than England, yes?
20/11/2012 12:34:07 AM
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Yes and no. Mostly no.
20/11/2012 10:59:10 AM
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So would you say
20/11/2012 04:21:36 PM
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Kind of, but not precisely. It's probably the easiest way to look at it, though. *NM*
20/11/2012 06:23:34 PM
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I am about as Anglophile as they come, as I dare say you may have noticed...
20/11/2012 07:35:36 PM
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Yes
20/11/2012 09:35:54 PM
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Now you just had to go and remind me...
20/11/2012 09:49:41 PM
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I'm speechless.
20/11/2012 10:08:53 PM
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Well, it IS true.
20/11/2012 08:12:13 PM
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I didn't say uncomfortable, I said funny.
20/11/2012 08:19:32 PM
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True, but it always felt very awkward to me, even when I considered mens tennis worth watching.
01/12/2012 05:10:21 PM
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Not all Scots dislike being called British. Only the Nationalist ones.
20/11/2012 07:34:32 PM
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Well, that is more reasonable then.
20/11/2012 08:07:18 PM
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Uh, what?
20/11/2012 08:55:12 PM
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Independence from England.
24/11/2012 01:37:11 PM
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The point I'm guessing Rebekah is referring to, and it's a fairly important one...
28/11/2012 07:20:11 PM
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Except that England did, however briefly, conquer and control Scotland.
01/12/2012 04:55:08 PM
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Re: Not all Scots dislike being called British. Only the Nationalist ones.
21/11/2012 12:58:26 AM
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As a United Statesian, that bothers me a bit as well.
24/11/2012 01:45:54 PM
- 723 Views