na ur a nob
Presumably a moor that straddles the England/Scotland border.
People from Scotland are Scottish whilst people from England are English.Both Scotland and England are part of the United Kingdom, or Britain, so they are both British.
Probably better than in England. and dont they teach scottish there instead of english?
No, a will made in England concerning a property in Scotland may not be automatically valid in Scotland. It is advisable to have a separate Scottish will prepared to ensure it complies with Scottish laws and regulations regarding inheritance and property.
Scotland is the country where Scottish English, Scots, and Scottish Gaelic are spoken. Scottish English is the most widely spoken language in Scotland, while Scots and Scottish Gaelic are minority languages.
The equivalent to an English GCSE is a Scottish Standard Grade. An A-level is roughly equivalent to a Higher in Scotland.
English, Scottish, and Welsh are all spoken in the United Kingdom. The United Kingdom takes in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales.
Never. The two crowns were united under James I of England, VI of Scotland, by simple inheritance. the scottish king, king James the sixth of Scotland inherited the English throne and became king James the first of and decided to unite England, Scotland and Ireland to make the united kingdom of great Britain in 1707.
If you go to Scotland it has a lot more beauty and if you are interested in walking, Scotland has a lot of walks. on the other hand England has better weather (but you can get good weather in Scotland too) and if you are English yourself then you probably wont understand what the Scottish are saying, when English say 'why' the Scottish actually say 'how'. in England it is more about the buses, in Scotland they prefer trains. England and Scotland have different education times, in Scotland you get categorised into your classes from Jan - DEC in England its around July - June ( i think, somewhere around that area) so you might want to take that into consideration. my mum nd dad wanted to move from Scotland to England so i no the differences between the two.
The English and Scottish flags come from when England and Scotland were separate countries and there was no such thing as the United Kingdom/Kingdom of Great Britain before the year 1707.
In Act III Scene 6 of Macbeth, the Scottish noblemen from England are Lennox and Caithness. They discuss the strange occurrences in Scotland and express their concerns about Macbeth's rule. These characters provide an outsider's perspective on the deteriorating situation in Scotland under Macbeth's tyrannical leadership.
It varies- some Scottish constituencies are bigger than English ones, and vice versa. there is no general rule (although as a nation, Scotland is smaller than England).