Greg Bobkin
Silver Seagull
- May 22, 2012
- 16,062
My mate loves nothing more than a Greek salad, followed by a heathy portion of baklava – washed down with a pint of ouzo – and he reckons he's shitehouse.
By the time they've got through the deed poll backlog the car will have rusted away.People tend to underestimate how useful that process is. I wanted a personalised car plate but it was way too expensive. Far cheaper was to change my name to GU09 AWK!
Yes indeed. one an illegal occupation that is not recognised as a separate country internationally. And neither should it be. Dreadful land grab by the Turkish that is a stain on the EU and is the biggest reason it is difficult for Turkey to join the EU.Because Cyprus is divided into 2 nation states. Cyprus(Greek) and Northern Cyprus (Turkish).?
Why do you think l elected to have "Dunk" on the back of my shirt!The replica shirt will cost a small fortune !
I gave my missus one up the wrong'un the other night, and I concur with your mate.My mate loves nothing more than a Greek salad, followed by a heathy portion of baklava – washed down with a pint of ouzo – and he reckons he's shitehouse.
Never trust a Turk.Yes indeed. one an illegal occupation that is not recognised as a separate country internationally. And neither should it be. Dreadful land grab by the Turkish that is a stain on the EU and is the biggest reason it is difficult for Turkey to join the EU.
It certainly isn't irrelevant to describe someone as Greek Cypriot.
My partner's large extended family of Turkish Cypriots whe ended up fleeing to London might have a few words to explain why this distinction still exists.We did indeed have a 'Greek ' Cypriot, it's strange that we don't also say an 'English' Australian, or 'English' American. An Australian is Australian, they speak English, an American is an American, they speak English (sort of). Alexis Nicholas is a Cypriot, he speaks Greek (sort of), but for reasons that should be lost in the midst of time and war, people still refer to Cypriots as Greek Cypriots.
The reason is not lost. Significant numbers of cypriots have Turkish heritage. Hence several small wars and Turkish invasion.We did indeed have a 'Greek ' Cypriot, it's strange that we don't also say an 'English' Australian, or 'English' American. An Australian is Australian, they speak English, an American is an American, they speak English (sort of). Alexis Nicholas is a Cypriot, he speaks Greek (sort of), but for reasons that should be lost in the midst of time and war, people still refer to Cypriots as Greek Cypriots.
Yes indeed. one an illegal occupation that is not recognised as a separate country internationally. And neither should it be. Dreadful land grab by the Turkish that is a stain on the EU and is the biggest reason it is difficult for Turkey to join the EU.
It certainly isn't irrelevant to describe someone as Greek Cypriot.
The best player you've never heard of.
He has enough trouble saying Joao.Pray for Warren?
I'm no expert on Cyprus but didn't the Turkish army invade after the coup d'etat by the Greek military junta? Of course, there's a lot (thousands of years) of history preceding this but as far as I know it wasn't just the Turkish being the bad guys.
If Turkey invaded Cyprus from the rear, would Greece help ?As I recall, Cyprus was governed by a government headed by Archbishop Mackarios, (spelling?) which was adjudged to be quite moderate. Then what was described as a gangster regime took over, and the Turks feared for the safety of the "Turkish Cypriots" living in the north, hence the invasion.
The Greeks will tell you it's an illegal and unprovoked occupation by Turkey, the Turks will tell you it was a necessary intervention to protect a Turkish minority from an aggressive Greek puppet regime.As I recall, Cyprus was governed by a government headed by Archbishop Mackarios, (spelling?) which was adjudged to be quite moderate. Then what was described as a gangster regime took over, and the Turks feared for the safety of the "Turkish Cypriots" living in the north, hence the invasion.
Because there are also Turkish Cypriots who are from Cyprus but are from the Turkish side and are associated more with Turkish culture.We did indeed have a 'Greek ' Cypriot, it's strange that we don't also say an 'English' Australian, or 'English' American. An Australian is Australian, they speak English, an American is an American, they speak English (sort of). Alexis Nicholas is a Cypriot, he speaks Greek (sort of), but for reasons that should be lost in the midst of time and war, people still refer to Cypriots as Greek Cypriots.
It was also encouraged heavily by the US and UK as it was around the time of heightened tensions with Russia.The Greeks will tell you it's an illegal and unprovoked occupation by Turkey, the Turks will tell you it was a necessary intervention to protect a Turkish minority from an aggressive Greek puppet regime.
Turkey may have come in like a bull in a china shop saying "try and stop us", but it wasn't unprovoked. The end result is a state of perpetual limbo between the two sides of Cyprus.
Under British rule the Greeks and Turks were quite intermingled but after the fall of the Ottomans and the wars that followed in Anatolia, Greek-Turkish relations collapsed to disastrous effect in Cyprus.