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or is it up to you? everyone says something different and it confuses me...i'm not from ther but it just interests me to know. what are you then?

2007-04-09 10:55:44 · 15 answers · asked by Sarah W 1 in Science & Mathematics Geography

15 answers

Basically if you are born in Ireland then you are Irish, but if you are born in London, paris, England or Britian the you are British.It is just like if you are born in the northern USA are you American or Canadian? American!!!! But it also depends on your background, you might be half and half.

2007-04-09 10:59:44 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

British

2007-04-13 05:39:05 · answer #2 · answered by vivekijs 3 · 0 0

British

2007-04-10 09:53:15 · answer #3 · answered by DaneMaricich 3 · 0 1

If you were born in Northern Ireland today, you would be a citizen of the United Kingdom.

The rest of Ireland is considered the Republic of Ireland.

There is a fairly distinct difference between the two places. They use different currencies and follow different laws. Most people born in Northern Ireland are proud to be citizens of the UK. Though having been born in Northern Ireland some may consider themselves "Irish".

2007-04-09 11:02:12 · answer #4 · answered by snard6 2 · 0 1

fairly it has no longer some element to do with faith yet racism; the Eireannachs are highly RC. The Protestants are highly Scots and English who were positioned there contained contained in the 17th century as a way to pacify the Irish. It did not artwork. to boot the straightforward incontrovertible actuality that. Northern eire, or Ulster, isn't portion of england yet eire is portion of the British Isles. As portion of the united kingdom of large Britain and northerly eire, the Ulster human beings are British regardless of if or no longer they prefer it or no longer. faster or later the Catholics will outbreed some element and then we are going to assert so long to them and in preserving with probability to each and each and every and all the Irish who opt to stay in Britain to boot. There are more advantageous in Britain than in eire. that's how the be conscious Hooligan were given the following into the language. How we English get blamed for each and all the concerns the descendants of those human beings furnish on an similar time as they bypass in yet another u . s . a .! We also get blamed for the Irish themes. It turned really after the Norman Conquest of england that they went over to eire. Like Wales and Scotland it wasn't the English to boot the straightforward incontrovertible actuality that the Norman French. Irish names usually situations come from the Norman conquerors, FitzPatrick, FitzGerald and so on. before each and everything they took over England, then Wales, tried Scotland and eire - blame the Normans who sneaked into England on an similar time because the Saxon Harold turned battling the Vikings contained contained in the north, then defeated a drained Saxon protection force. no longer some element is continually only because it type of feels. somewhat analyzing is a risky element. the actuality of historic previous can circumvent present day dissent. Left on my own, the English, Scots and Irish could were good neighbours.

2016-11-27 23:22:03 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i would say Irish. Ireland is an island of its own. if you are British, you are born on the island of Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales), but as Northern Ireland is part of the UK, you can also call yourself British. Although, Great Britain, Ireland, Isle of Man, the Orkneys, and a few others are all part of the British Isles (getting the name from the largest, GREAT Britain), so all could be called generically British.

2007-04-09 12:49:12 · answer #6 · answered by SAMUEL ELI 7 · 1 1

Both. An english person is English and British. A scottish person is scottish and british. An Northern irish person is irish and british. :)

2007-04-09 11:00:16 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Probably depends on how you define yourself.
You'd be a British citizen, that part would be easy.
But you may (or may not) consider yourself Irish, ethnically.

2007-04-10 05:34:10 · answer #8 · answered by rob1977nc 6 · 1 1

british because if u look on a map northern ireland belongs to the UK

2007-04-10 04:57:39 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

It probably has a lot to do with who you ask, and what nationality your parents are. if they are of irish catholic extraction, you would probably call yourself "Irish" even though you would be a british subject.

2007-04-09 12:52:22 · answer #10 · answered by cogentQ 2 · 0 1

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