Willy Dangle
New member
- Aug 31, 2011
- 3,551
....what is the difference between GB & the UK?
Great Britain is the main land mass of England, Scotland and Wales. UK includes Northern Ireland. Hence "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland" being the full name of our country.
It depends how you're defining "main land mass". GB includes most the islands surrounding the mainland (e.g. IOW, Scilly Isles, Orkneys etc), but not all (eg Isle of Man and the Channel islands).
Not sure that's right. I was always taught that "the British Isles" includes about 1,000 islands, most of which are tiny, barren and uninhabited (but also, in geographical terms, Ireland, with a population of 3m).
Great Britain, on the other hand, is the biggest of the British Isles, ie. nothing that's not attached to it counts.
Does Canvey Island count? Shirley not?
Great is short for Greater as in the larger landmass of Britain - England, Scotland and Wales.
Great is to differentiate from Little. Brittany in France was once Little Britain, after being settled by Cornish and Welsh Britons, and we were (and still are) Great Britain.
Great Britain is the main land mass of England, Scotland and Wales. UK includes Northern Ireland. Hence "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland" being the full name of our country.
great britain= scotland wales and england
uk= great britian and northern ireland
Scotland could leave the UK tomorrow, but can never leave Great Britain (er, unless some future technology enables them to turn the remains of Hadrian Wall into a combined laser drill and landmass transporter).