It's not that cold ! Sure - we have cooler winters - but they're not as cold as they used to be ! I remember walking to school when I was a kid (50 years ago) - though six-inches of snow ! The last time we had snow in my part of the UK was about six years ago - and that was only a thin layer of less than an inch !
isnot cold in engalnd
because it's really far from the equator.
Probably 1947
No. Britain has a temperate maritime climate.
Europe was shielded by the US.
Canada is still around. So is great Britain.
Not so great.
For Great Britain, everything evolves around "WWII"; so when Britain says on televison, "post war" they're saying WWII. WWII was Great Britains "...We stood alone, ...and so many owed so much to so few (RAF pilots during the Battle of Britain),...and "we will fight them on the beaches, we will fight them in the air, we will never surrender! (Winston Churchill). So...when one thinks of Great Britain, one must think in terms of World War II (this is their time line). The cold war has little to do with Britain; other than the fact that Britain was a major US ally (under NATO) and that the US had many military installations in Europe and Britain. Other than that, the US invented and used atomic bombs, no one else has ever done so. The cold war was between the super-powers of the US & USSR, with everyone else falling behind them, second, third, fourth, etc.
USSR, Great Britain, America, France
Great Britain is formed from England, Scotland and Wales. The United Kingdom is Great Britain and Northern Ireland. So the answer is YES, Great Britain is part of the UK.
Great Britain and the United States were allies to defeat Germany so the US would not attack Great Britain.
It isn't. Great Britain (or Britain) is part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, so some people might refer to Britain OR the UK and mean the same thing. London is the capital city of the UK in the same way that Washington DC is the capital city of the US.
Gosh, Britain has been in so many they are hard to count.
The thermometers used to measure the temperature of things in Great Britain do so using the Celsius scale.