So is anyone on here from England?

Originally posted by SoLiDUS
Close to, but not from! ;)

Can I still be an honourary Brit ? Pretty please ? ... with an accent
on top ?

:p

your'e in....but your accent could be from the west country!!:D :m:
 
Originally posted by IXL777
Where are you from firefly?
I'm from England, and reluctant to say anymore. After all, you could all be paedophiles! :bugeye:

Not that that worries me, I'm not a child. :rolleyes: ;)
 
Originally posted by IXL777
your'e in....but your accent could be from the west country!!:D :m:

fire fly..I think you are right....always be careful..seeing this is a thread for Brits,it is nice to know roughly what area people are from..i.e maveric is in Wales and so on.:cool:
you may be a bloke yourself!!:D :D
 
Last edited:
Originally posted by Captain_Crunch
no, but i am from Scotland.

Official Flag of Scotland
flag.jpg

History Of the flag:
Legend says that in 832 AD, an army of Scots was facing a Northumbrian army. The Scottish king prayed to St Andrew for help, and saw the saltire of St Andrew (the saint had been martyred on a diagonal cross) in the heavens against a clear blue sky. On seeing the cross in the sky, he swore that if the Scots beat the English in the battle that was about to be joined, then St Andrew would forever be the patron saint of Scotland

The Scots did in fact win the battle, and from that day on the saltire has been the national flag of Scotland.

Scottish Royal Flag.
fl1133.jpg

History of the Flag:
There is a second flag which is associated with Scotland, the "Rampant Lion", or Royal Flag of Scotland. Although based on an older Scottish flag than the St. Andrew's Cross, it should, strictly speaking, now only be used by the monarch in relation to her capacity as Queen in Scotland¹. However, it is widely used as a second national flag.

The Rampant Lion flag flies over the offices of the Secretary of State for Scotland (who is the representative of the U.K. government in Scotland); that is Dover House in London and New St Andrew's House in Edinburgh.

King George V signed a Royal Warrant in 1934 allowing the use of the Rampant Lion flag as "a mark of loyalty" because of the forthcoming Jubilee celebrations. The Lord Lyon² officially now takes the view that this permission "related to decorative ebullition", that is, it is permissable to wave the flag at football matches. It is however not allowable to fly the flag without permission, on a flag-pole or from a building. The Lord Lyon once threatened the town councillors of Cumbernauld with an Act passed in 1679 which prescribed the death penalty for mis-use of the royal arms.

O Flower of Scotland,
When will we see
Your like again,
That fought and died for,
Your wee bit Hill and Glen,
And stood against him,
Proud Edward's Army,
And sent him homeward,
Tae think again.

The Hills are bare now,
And Autumn leaves
lie thick and still,
O'er land that is lost now,
Which those so dearly held,
That stood against him,
Proud Edward's Army,
And sent him homeward,
Tae think again.

Those days are past now,
And in the past
they must remain,
But we can still rise now,
And be the nation again,
That stood against him,
Proud Edward's Army,
And sent him homeward,
Tae think again.

0 Flower of Scotland,
When will we see
your like again,
That fought and died for,
Your wee bit Hill and Glen,
And stood against him,
Proud Edward's Army,
And sent him homeward,
Tae think again.

Background Info
Flower Of Scotland was written in 1970 by folk musician Roy Williamson. The song grew in popularity and was used as Scotland's anthem by the Scottish Rugby Union in the mid 1970s. The stirring anthem was then adopted as the anthem for the national football team in place of "Scotland the Brave".

It is by far the the most popular of the Scottish anthems, but it is not recognised by the state or used at any state occasions.

The most rousing renditions of "Flower of Scotland" tend to come at Murrayfield Stadium when 65,000 rugby fans sing it accompanied by pipes and drums before international matches.

The Official anthem used at United Kingdom state occasions and Royal events is "God Save the Queen". The Official anthem is unpopular but the government hasn't changed it to something more appropriate. Scottish institutions like churches and universities sometimes use "God Save the Queen" during ceremonial occassions. Many people view it as an English anthem and point to anti-Scottish verses:

"O, Lord our God Arise,
Scatter our enemies,
And make them fail.
Confound their politics,
Frustrate their knavish tricks,
On him our hopes are fixed,
God Save us all"

"God grant that Marshal Wade,
May by that mighty aid,
Victory Bring.
May he sedition hush,
And like a torrent rush,
Rebellious Scots to crush,
God save the King."

Others disagree with it because of its obvious pro-monarchy sentiment.

Thank You and Good Night. I'll leave you with a quote.

"Everywhere I go in the world people want to know about Scotland and why we tolerate our affairs being run by someone elses government" -Sean Connery.

and another

"The most prosperous region of England is Scotland" -Richard Ottaway, Tory MP, 1994

Cheers.

Are you from Scotland then!!:D
 
Originally posted by BLASTOFF
i am also from ENGLAND and proud to be british so you see trust no 1 you are not alone.

I agree with you also..trust no 1 .......we don't want to become paranoid..but we must be cautious.....you may get some looneys on this forum..trust no 1 has not answered anybody ..and he/she asked the original question and we have gone completely of it....
this thread is supposed to be a bout british people...:eek: :eek:
 
Originally posted by BLASTOFF
i am also from ENGLAND and proud to be british so you see trust no 1 you are not alone.

I agree with you also..trust no 1 .......we don't want to become paranoid..but we must be cautious.....you may get some looneys on this forum..trust no 1 has not answered anybody ..and he/she asked the original question and we have gone completely of it....
this thread is supposed to be a bout british people...:eek: :eek:
 
Originally posted by BLASTOFF
i am also from ENGLAND and proud to be british so you see trust no 1 you are not alone.

I agree with you also..trust no 1 .......we don't want to become paranoid..but we must be cautious.....you may get some looneys on this forum..trust no 1 has not answered anybody ..and he/she asked the original question and we have gone completely of it....
this thread is supposed to be a bout british people...:eek: :eek:
 
Firefly

I'm from England, and reluctant to say anymore. After all, you could all be paedophiles!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
They never asked for your address,just location.
Any way what is your address.:D
 
Firefly

I live next door to you. I'm the crazed one really!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
So its you banging on my bedroom wall every night,shouting I want you.
:D :eek:
 
Re: Firefly...

Originally posted by tablariddim I was actually born in Cyprus and my wife is from there too and we always wanted to live here because of the climate. Luckily we were able to retire in our thirties and so we moved. Both places feel like home to me. [/B]

So you are not " originally from London "...
 
Registered in Deptford.. Left for calmer situation ( Adolph insisted on " dropping in " every night ). Brought up on Dartmoor ( not in )....
 
Adam 2314...

considering that I'm a British Citizen and tax payer and and that most of my school life and the whole of my working career took place in London and because now I don't live there anymore, then I would say that I'm originally from London. Even my fellow country-men perceive me as being 'Englezos'... my attitudes, tastes and most important memories were formed there.

Now if I was still living in London and somebody asked, 'Hey, is there anybody here from Cyprus?' then I would say I was originally from Cyprus, but only in the sense that I was born there. See the difference?

Maybe this is something that can only be understood by people of dual nationality.
 
I'm from the soon to be all concreted over Garden of England, thanks Mr Prescott, must remember to cross you off my christmas card list...
 
Originally posted by spookz
cap

i vaguely remember being in ayr. i was visting my aunt margaret and yes they did try to offer me haggis. coolest part was the train ride up there. i hung out with 2 junkie girls and we had a ball.
i like scots! how about an armed uprising against the english eh?

Haggis is'nt eaten widely or as much any more. I like it.
Let me tell you, you get junkies everywhere even in England. ! ;)
What about a game of toss the caber instead of an armed uprising, winner takes all. te he.

Originally posted by IXL777
Are you from Scotland then!
 
Originally posted by Captain_Crunch
Haggis is'nt eaten widely or as much any more. I like it...

Depends - we have it regularly (not just on Burns' Night) - it's delicious, nutritious, easy to prepare and cheap!

And goes great with whisky (now there's a good idea)

Cheers

Ron.
 
wow, another Scot?
I thought most people only ate haggis on burns night now. How wrong i must be, as usual. :)

Cheers.
 
Originally posted by Captain_Crunch
wow, another Scot?
I thought most people only ate haggis on burns night now

Not at all - although sales do peak around Burns' Night. Buy a tin (yes, a tin!) at your local supermarket if you haven't tried it recently. And I must admit that I almost lived on it when I was a student (don't ask how long ago).

Cheers,

Ron.

P.S and I now have that glass of whisky beside me - 'Black Bottle'.
 
A tin of haggis? Is that like black pudding?
mmmmmm.

I go to Cali and am a student, must try living on haggis for at least a week. :)

Cheers.
 
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