Home Forums Chat Forum If you were born in Scotland but your parents were English….

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 73 total)
  • If you were born in Scotland but your parents were English….
  • esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    Would you be Scottish or English?

    Mrs G’s friends parents are English but were living in Edinburgh when daughter was born. Is she Scottish or English?

    Mrs G’s dad was Proper Glaswegionic, so does that make her more Scottish than her friend? (Mrs G’s paternal grandma was a McDonald & her Dads middle name was Lennox)

    *answers on a massive postcard please* 😛

    Edit, Mrs G was also born in England.

    km79
    Free Member

    Would you be Scottish or English?

    I would be Scottish.

    Mrs G’s friends parents are English but were living in Edinburgh when daughter was born. Is she Scottish or English?

    Whatever she wants to be.

    Mrs G’s dad was Proper Glaswegionic, so does that make her more Scottish than her friend? (Mrs G’s paternal grandma was a McDonald & her Dads middle name was Lennox)

    Can only be settled with a fight.

    esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    Can only be settled with a fight.

    In pure Glaswegian styleee!? 😀

    P-Jay
    Free Member

    Whichever you prefer, I’ve two cousins – born in Germany, but technically on US soil as it was a US Airforce base. Mum Welsh, Dad English, lived in North of England since about 5 when they left Germany. They were Welsh last time we spoken a few years ago.

    It might be a bit odd to perhaps be born in NI to Northern Irish Parents and declare yourself Scottish but there’s no real difference to being English, Welsh, Scottish, Cornish, Northern Irish etc – subtlety different laws but that’s based on where you are and where you live.

    Sports have there own rules of course.

    km79
    Free Member

    In pure Glaswegian styleee!?

    Of course, and if the friend refuses then she must be from Edinburgh and then Mrs G (and Glasgow) wins by default.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    It’s her choice to what she identifies with. If it was my daughter I’d hope she shunned nationalism, but wouldn’t be for me to dictate her.

    esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    The argument is that Mrs G’s friend reckons she’s more Scottish cos she was born there. Mr’s G reckons she’s more Scottish cos of the lineage.

    If it was my daughter I’d hope she shunned nationalism,

    Whoaa boy, too serious. (are you actually ‘Neutral’)

    gallowayboy
    Full Member

    Which one likes mince an tatties more?

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Are you good at any sports?

    (this joke has 2 different punchlines, it’s very efficient)

    esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    Which one likes mince an tatties more?

    Mrs G’s Dad loved tripe & whisky (maybe not together) 😀

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    Would you be Scottish or English?

    Would you be civic or joyous?

    moonsaballoon
    Full Member

    I’m English , wife from New Zealand . Son born in Glasgow . His accent at 3 years old is best described as confused .

    chewkw
    Free Member

    Follow the parents.

    If both parents are English then regardless of where they are in the world she is English. (Vice versa for Scottish)

    If parents are from both locations then she is both.

    If she is born in third country say Nigeria then she can be Nigerian by nationality but she is British/English/Scottish Nigerian.

    richmtb
    Full Member

    I don’t actually think national identity should necessarily based on who your parents are or where you were born. Where you were born and who your parents are isn’t your choice. But you can choose to live somewhere and become an active part of that society and culture.

    I’m Scottish by birth (or the grace of God!) My wife has lived here for 15 years and has chosen to have a life and raise a family here. She’s here by choice so as far as I’m concerned she’s welcome to adopt a Scottish identity if that’s what she wants.

    CountZero
    Full Member

    I think you need to be three generations along before declaring what nationality you are, or at least long enough for it to show in your DNA and bones.
    Otherwise you’re just another incomer.

    grumpysculler
    Free Member

    If both parents are English then regardless of where they are in the world she is English. (Vice versa for Scottish)

    In which case we must all be African.

    votchy
    Free Member

    Would you be Scottish or English?

    You would be British 😀

    wobbliscott
    Free Member

    You’d be British, which is what you put on any forms in the nationality box. My mum was born in Glasgow and dad England and I’m British and proud. I never consider myself to be English or Scottish. I consider the home nations in the same way I do counties. I can’t get too excited about it apart from at 6 Nations time.

    Incidentally my brother has married a Russian and his son has dual Russian/British nationality and was born in Africa. What does that make him?

    Nobeerinthefridge
    Free Member

    Apparently if you hold a rugby ball, you can choose whichever nationality you want…..

    cheekymonkey888
    Free Member

    also applies to whichever way you kick a football too.. it also says British on my passport too

    tjagain
    Full Member

    There are ” the people of scotland” – the people that live here and have made scotland their home and there is ” the scots people” – those who are ethnically scots.

    firestarter
    Free Member

    I’m English as I was born in England

    But as my grandfather was Irish my dad who was born in England has an Irish passport and my younger brother who was also born in England has an Irish passport and claims to be Irish, worse still his kids think they are Irish too and hold Irish passports

    Me and my Sisters, my mum and my grandmother are all English

    Baffles me tbh

    joshvegas
    Free Member

    I was born in England but we moved up to fife when i was less than a year old.

    I identify myself as scottish as i know nothing else, its my home and i love it.

    Sonetime i even play the fifer card.

    I’m not some mad nationalist though its purely geographical. Half and half in regards to parents and all four nations if i go back a couple of generations.

    British on my passport is not an issue for me its just a bit clunky . North British?

    those who are ethnically scots.

    Ethnic scots are surely Irish?

    Nobeerinthefridge
    Free Member

    also applies to whichever way you kick a football too

    Not really, there has to be some lineage in football, rugby at the moment would make Jackie Charlton blush…

    whitestone
    Free Member

    The true answer to the OP’s question is:

    unlucky 😆

    I suspect that for the most part if you were brought up in Scotland and speak with the local accent then even those born and raised there wouldn’t know the difference unless you told them.

    When asked what nationality I am or where I’m from I will usually reply with the least confusing answer so it could be England/English, Britain/British, occasionally UK as country. It’s just a label, it only really matters to those who want to create divisions.

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    There are ” the people of scotland” – the people that live here and have made scotland their home and there is ” the scots people” – those who are ethnically scots

    There is a single Scot ethnicity?

    scud
    Free Member

    Grandad on my mums side, born in Wiltshire of Italian parents.
    Nan on mums side, of Scottish parents, born in Sunderland and raised in Sheffield

    Grandad on dads side, from Larne in NI before moving to Birmingham
    Nan on dads side, born in Shropshire before moving to Birmingham

    My uncle was born in Sunderland, raised in Sheffield and now lives in Grays, Essex which makes for a great mash-up of an accent.

    I was born in Portsmouth, lived up in North and West Yorkshire for long time, worked extensively in Spain and Morocco and now live in Norfolk…

    I have absolutely no idea about where i should call “home” but i think that is what has always made me have a huge Wanderlust!!

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    simply_oli_y
    Free Member

    English parents then english by lineage. But a person of scotland in terms of culture etc.

    If a cats born in a kennel it doesn’t make it a dog, does it?

    mrblobby
    Free Member

    Everyone who’s English will say you’re Scottish, and everyone who’s Scottish will say you’re English 🙄

    Phil_H
    Full Member

    Everyone who’s English will say you’re Scottish, and everyone who’s Scottish will say you’re English

    This!
    Born in Scotland, lived here all my life but because my parents were born in England I spend the first half of my life being told I didn’t belong.
    This probably explains my deep distrust of Scottish nationalism

    thomthumb
    Free Member

    am i ‘more indian’ than my indian mate? His grandparents all born in Uganda. My grandfather born in Raipur.

    doesn’t make him african, nor me indian IMO.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    If a cats born in a kennel it doesn’t make it a dog, does it?

    no but if it is born in scotland it is scottish

    You are the nationality of where you were born you can have affinity to anywhere you like

    Scottish with english kids

    sweepy
    Free Member

    I don’t think it matters a jot where you or your parents happened to be born. I see myself as a citizen of Scotland, I chose to live here, I contribute to society and pay tax here and I’m committed to the place. I’ve been In Scotland longer than anywhere else.
    Then you get the likes of Sean Connery, batters on and on about Scotland but loves the place so much he would do anything for Scotland except actually live and contribute there.

    Murray
    Full Member

    My mum was born in India where she lived until she was 18 when she moved to Greenock. She then joined the army and lived in a variety of places in England and settled down in Kent. She’s definitely completely English but is always apologising for what the English have done around the world (despite her forebears in India being Scottish Fergusons).

    My brother’s children are Welsh despite being born and living in St Albans.

    duckman
    Full Member

    My son was born in Aberdeen and has a Welsh Mother. He got right into footy last year and supports his Mums country as they are better…Kids at school now call him Squelchy 😆

    mrmo
    Free Member

    My dad is Irish and my mum a Londoner and i was born in Gloucestershire.

    Got informed more than once growing up that i was a f***ing Paddy

    I got round the identity issue by being British or European…That is what is on the cover of one passport, the other says Irish but i can’t really say i am.

    redstripe
    Free Member

    You can claim whatever you want, does it really matter or make you a different person? That said I did have some genealogy stuff and a DNA test info via family member which showed male line roots in SW England going back at least 4500 years. Female line all from SW Wales similarly back donkey’s years. All interesting to find out for sure. Brought up by Welsh side and everything about being this instilled from an early age including language, rugby etc. But born and lived in London for years. So at various times can lay claim to being a Londoner, a taff, a yokel etc whatever suits the situation.

    Actually it’s probably all pretty meaningless, I guess virtually everyone is a mixture of backgrounds and has moved about these days and we are all related anyway not that far back, or if the royal family / landed gentry still very much are.

    Did have a weird situation though a few years back though when speaking to a Moldovan priest (long story) who was really having a go and giving me a stern lecture about mixing blood not being good when he found out Mrs is Scottish. I didn’t think people like that really existed anymore.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    sweepy – Member

    I don’t think it matters a jot where you or your parents happened to be born. I see myself as a citizen of Scotland, I chose to live here, I contribute to society and pay tax here and I’m committed to the place.

    This.

    johnx2
    Free Member

    You can think you are whatever you like/be whatever you like deep down, but to me you’ll be whatever your accent says you are.

    Take my wife: claims to identify with yorkshire having lived most of her life brought up three kids, yadda yadda. Accent says scouse. Next!

    (Right then. off to the sexy accents thread it is.)

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 73 total)

The topic ‘If you were born in Scotland but your parents were English….’ is closed to new replies.