Exactly that :rolleyes:
I'm not rascist but sometimes you fecking Welsh are slow :P
btw.......MacDonalds was great........puts teh Great in Great Britain :01:
Jonno :cool:
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Oh wow some Americans are dumm.:O
Sum peepul arr dumm two. Figure that.
http://www.bluelinecomics.com/pictur...upid%20600.jpg
Congrats- you had a powerful army 230 years ago. not what I would call very current.
and as for navy, congradulations, you have the second most powerfull navy in the world. To bad it's only as powerful as one of our six carrier groups. America controls 53% of the world's navy.
Yup, I'm sure the jocks would be so chuffed to put the "Mc" in front of the abscess burgers, vegetarian (dripped in animal fats) burgers and plain french (animal fat drenched, yet again) fries into their long lost ancestry. Along with the funding of the IRA for several decades. :smilie4:
Go Scots. :01:
Jebus fucking christ, at least spell Britain right.
You may end up in Birmingham, ffs. :dabs:
every dog has its own day, once was Persia then roman's... then german now america soon but not so soon thier page will purg also. ball will never remains on same ground for ever.
:bawa: :huh:
http://www.frontiernet.net/~joe14580...%20obvious.jpg
I prefer this Captain Obvious.
:shuriken:
From wikipedia:
Actually, this is all pretty interesting. It's amazing how many people don't know this stuff.Quote:
Great Britain
Great Britain refers to the largest of the British Isles. The word "Great" simply means "larger" (no connection with "greatness" in other senses is intended) in contrast to Brittany, a historical term for a peninsula in modern France that largely corresponds with the present day French province of Bretagne. That region was settled by many British immigrants during the period of Anglo-Saxon migration into Britain, and named "Little Britain" by them. The French term "Bretagne" now refers to the French "Little Britain", not to the British "Great Britain", which in French is called Grande-Bretagne.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_britain
Proof that Mr Cheese has been round a while,
In Cheddar Gorge near Bristol, the remains of animals native to mainland Europe such as antelopes, Brown Bears, and Wild Horses have been found alongside a human skeleton, Cheddar Man, dated to about 7150 B.C.