No matter what board i'm in, no matter what time of the day it is, there's always a Brit bashing thread
Feels good knowing how much street cred my country has in order for faggots in other countries we used to rule to get salty
Please keep em coming, the more the better
>>52658854
britain bad
This is so sad. It's so sad to see this much denial from bongs. They think people are jealous, but really your country is just shit. It's sad also that Bongs can't accept that their empire is dead and that they are not relevant anymore. These walls you build up in order to hide the truth are sad also. Nobody is jealous of you. There is nothing to be jealous about.
>>52661049
Wow, Ireland's really going for it today.
Did someone spike your potato?
>>52658854
I'm a big Teaboo t.b.h.
Drank a cup of Yorkshire earlier today actually
>>52658854
When has Britain ever defeated another major European power without the help of a coalition?
>>52663094
Fourth Anglo-Dutch War
>>52661049
Amen, Fenian cousin!
Nova Scotian Irish here, my great grandfather fought in the Irish Civil War in the ranks of Éamon de Valera's rebellion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OT0yoo9B2Bc&index=13&list=PLm1Y9IbTNDp1h9sIzDS-ABEIsHnSgoYM8
>>52662453
>>52658854
Come out ya black'n'tans! Come and fight me like a man! Tell your wife you wives how you won medals down in Flanders!
Tell them how the IRA made you run like hell away, From the green and lovely lanes in Killashandra!
>>52663237
people from America are called Americans
people from Britain are called British
people from Germany are called Germans
people from the netherlands are called dutch
why, this triggers my autism?
>>52664116
>the united states of america
>literally a non-name
>people born there call themselves americans instead of united statians
m8
>>52664116
>Now, what about the Dutch? There are three terms we need to define: Holland, the Netherlands, and Dutch. In Old English dutch simply meant “people or nation.” (This also explains why Germany is called Deutschland in German.) Over time, English-speaking people used the word Dutch to describe people from both the Netherlands and Germany. (At that point in time, in the early 1500s, the Netherlands and parts of Germany, along with Belgium and Luxembourg, were all part of the Holy Roman Empire.) Specifically the phrase “High Dutch” referred to people from the mountainous area of what is now southern Germany. “Low Dutch” referred to people from the flatlands in what is now the Netherlands. Within the Holy Roman Empire, the word “Netherlands” was used to describe people from the low-lying (nether) region (land). The term was so widely used that when they became a formal, separate country in 1815, they became the Kingdom of the Netherlands. The word “Holland” literally meant “wood-land” in Old English and originally referred to people from the northern region of the Netherlands. Over time, it came to apply to the entire country.
Copied from a site