Probably a mixture of Celtic, Danish and Norse.
It was James Craig, first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland
There is no such nationality as British. This is just the name of a state 'Britain'. The languages spoken within the British Isles are 1/ English 2/ Welsh 3/ Gaelic
Scots Gaelic: sinn-seachad-sinn-seanmhairIrish Gaelic: ?
Edward Dwelly has written: 'Directory of Somerset [1626-74]' 'A muster roll of the British non-commissioned officers and men present at the Battle of Waterloo' -- subject(s): Great Britain, Great Britain. Army, Registers, Waterloo, Battle of, 1815 'Devon m.i' -- subject(s): Epitaphs, Heraldry, Registers of births, Genealogy, Sources 'Somerset parish registers' 'The illustrated Gaelic-English dictionary, containing every Gaelic word and meaning given in all previously published dictionaries and a great number never in print before, to which is prefixed a concise Gaelic grammar' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, Gaelic Names, Gaelic language, Names, Gaelic, Names, Scottish Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic Names, Scottish Gaelic language 'Faclair gaidhlig' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Scottish Gaelic language, Gaelic, English language, English 'The illustrated Gaelic-English dictionary... to which is prefixed a concise Gaelic grammar'
It doesn't look like Scottish Gaelic.
In Irish (Gaelic): mórgacht or mórgas.In Scottish Gaelic: mòralachd
Sinseanmháthair means great-grandmother in Irish.sinn-seanmhair means great-grandmother in Scottish Gaelic.
"England isn't a country. We sided with Great Britain." Wrong again. Great Britain is not a country either. The country at the time which allied with the US, was the UK; united kingdom of Great Britain and [at the time not northern] Ireland. It is like saying "mainland america", it is a geographical term, more commonly mistaken for "the island of Britain", Great Britain being the outlying islands. Only Americans call it Great Britain. NO ONE in the UK calls it Great Britain apart from an atlas which includes all the islands around it.
He was saying in a formal way..given the existing conditions God and common sense would say we (America and Great Britian) should separate.
He was saying in a formal way..given the existing conditions God and common sense would say we (America and Great Britian) should separate.
Before the revolution or after Before great Britain After us or our congressmen... But we had more saying back then