“Our Graham” is a reference to the game show Blind Date (based on The Dating game) presented by Cilla Black and Graham Skidmore (although you only ever heard Graham’s voice). Cilla would always say something like, “Now, it’s over to our Graham with the scores” and the phrase “our Graham” caught on.
The man that's shouting and ringing a bell was the town crier there was no news papers in hundreds of years ago so the town crier would stand in the streets and ring the bell then he would read the news out to the people 😊
Town Criers existed after printing was invented. However, many people were unable to read, unless you had money and paid for schooling. Universal education didn't start till around 1880.
It's "Edd the Duck" - BBCc hildrens TV presenter, comedian, actor, pop singer, video game star, patron of the Children In Need charity and the UK Olympic team mascot at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. A legend in his own lifetime.
Our Graham is from an old British tv show called Blind Date. The host Cilla Black (same one) would refer to the voice over guy as Our Graham. A quite uniquely British joke
The Town Crier background is Hatton Walk in Enfield Town, North London. In case anyone needs to know this vital piece of information. A trendy little cut-through in an otherwise not-so-trendy town centre. M&S in the background, you can just see the side roof of Pearsons department store, and Clarke's shoes just around the corner. Plenty of places to spend more than you should on stuff. This has been a public information notice.
And when used as a backdrop, could also be known as "Green-screen Land"... And thanks for the info, I like it when people take the time to do things like that. 😁
"Destiny Manifested" is a reference to the racist theory of of "Manifest Destiny" that was a big part of the ideology of American colonization - the belief that the settlers were superior to the native Americans and god wanted them to control the continent.
A couple of other names for consideration: “Guns’r’us” “United Litigation” or you could always give the country a boy band sounding name like “Only profits allowed”. I very much enjoy the fact that you have a sense of humour that includes teasing your country.
Boom Box was my prize possession during the 1990's. I was one of two people in Middle School that had a dual deck boom box. Which was perfect for copying other tapes...
On the other hand ..... Richard ap Meryk, anglicised to Richard Amerike (or Ameryk) (c. 1440-1503) was a British merchant, royal customs officer and later, sheriff of Bristol. Several claims have been made for Amerike by popular writers of the late twentieth century. One was that he was the major funder of the voyage of exploration launched from Bristol by the Venetian John Cabot in 1497, and that Amerike was the owner of Cabot's ship, the Matthew.[1] The other claim revived a theory first proposed in 1908 by a Bristolian scholar and amateur historian, Alfred Hudd. Hudd's theory, greatly elaborated by later writers, suggested that the continental name America was derived from Amerike's surname in gratitude for his sponsorship of Cabot's successful discovery expedition to 'the new World'. However, neither claim is backed up by hard evidence, and the consensus view is that America is named after Amerigo Vespucci, the Italian explorer. Richard ap Meryk was of Welsh origin, hence the ap Meryk (son of Meryk).
I love your videos. What a soothing voice you have. You should do audio books. Did you also know you have bit of a doppleganger? Goolge Jos Butler England cricket 🏏 he has a nice voice too
Chris Colombus never set foot on what is now the USA 😂. He hit South America and the Carribean Island, but didnt come further North. So I always thought it was strange that the US has a Columbus Day....
The Waldseemuller map was part of my first module in my History degree (which of course in the UK is nothing but history, no maths or languages and whatnot). Can’t remember anything else about the module though
For an alternative name of the USA, Frank Lloyd Wright suggested Usonia. It was in vogue for a short period, and was picked up by Zamenhof, who used it for the Esperanto word for the country. To this day, Esperanto speakers use the work Usono when referring to the US.
Are there actually people who still learn and use Esperanto?! Also, why the jump from Usonia to Usono? Would Usonia be pronounced like "You - Sonya" or "OO - Sonya" (like the name Sonia/Sonya etc), or like "OO - Sew - near", "You - SO - nyah"...? something else entirely?! And with Usono - what pronunciation for that one? thanks! ☮
@@theinvisibleneonrainbowzeb2567 yes people do still speak and learn Esperanto. The internet has made contact between Esperanto speakers much easier. There are some native speakers of the language as well, the result of two Esperanto speakers who had children together and brought them up multilingually
There's also a theory that the Welsh also landed in the Americas before Columbus. And it was well known around the Bristol area that there was good fishing in the Grand Banks area well before Columbus.
The first Europeans who fished the Grand Banks were actually the Basques. More than a thousand years ago the Basques were marketing salted cod - and never telling anyone where they got them from.
That map you said "thumbs down" on, it is a lot better than you probably think, it just is in another projection. Since I can't be bothered to find out which projection just look up a map centered on canada (or new foundland really) and regardless of (common) projection it should be fairly close. Ther Mercator projection becomes weirder the further away you are from wherever you centered it (and most commonly this is at the equator)
wait, what did the people who lived there before call the continent? did they not have a name for the whole thing? did they have maps? i never thought about that...
In china is 5 continents : asia america africa europe oceania(australia) or 6 with artartida also coutries as : spain italy france greece rumania turkey vietnam indonesia south korea rumania portugal and others coutries
Why did you, Mr. "let's pause to see all the hidden jokes", fail to pause the video at 5:47 to read the list of ten most expensive maps ever sold? Anyway, here's what it says: 1. $10,000,000 for Waldseemuller's "birth certificate of America". 2. 2,600,000 pounds for the first ever map of China (really old). 3. 1,900,000 pounds for a really small map of Babylonia drawn onto a grain of rice. 4. 1,290,000 pounds for the 1972 Apollo 17 mission crew's map of their lunar landing site. 5. 883,000 pounds for the original "Hundred Acre Wood" illustration by E. H. Sheppard. 6. 725,015 pounds for a map to buried treasure worth a million dollars. 7. 540,000 pounds for the Marauder's Map from the set of Harry Potter. 8. 500,000 pounds for a "Big Art Attack" map of Liverpool made out of 25,000 20-pound notes. 9. 340,000 pounds for the A-Z in John Lennon's glovebox. 10. 279,000 pounds for a map of a 3 bed house in Wolverhampton (buyer thought he was buying the house).
When I visited Canada (I'm from UK) I was told that referring to 'Americans' and 'Canadians' as different annoyed the Canadians, who say 'We are ALL Americans!'. Maybe people from the USA need a better name than 'Americans', but 'United Statsians' sounds silly.
The United States in the Continent of America could refer to both the USA and Mexico (The United Mexican States) The name of the USA is bit like Germany naming itself the United States of Eurasia....
So, not only did Amerigo Vespucci get a country named after him after his first name, but he also got a beach named after him after his last name! Does he have a middle name, and if so, what place is named after it!?!? >XD
Who else leaves a 'like' within the first two seconds or so to save time or 'just in case we forget to by the end'? Obviously we can remove the 'like' if we end up not enjoying the video but in the case of Jago, such a U-turn would be as likely as the Tower Subway reopening.
It's disputed that Columbus underestimated earths size. He might have heard of the report of an irish monk about the viking discoveries,can't remember his name.he wouldn't get money for this ,though.after all the size of earth was known since Erathostenes.
It seems the problem for residents of the United States of America do not know where USA is, certainly some have no idea there is anything beyond their country!
My brother married a Brazilian lady, and this was the first I learned of the "America" controversy. I think I said something horribly offensive (in her view!) by referring to her country as being "in south America". She was very nice about it but it was also VERY clear to me that that was not the correct way to refer to that continent. And between her broken English and my poor Portuguese, I actually don't know how to refer to it at all now. So I'm just going to go ahead and try and be MORE specific!
"A DISUNITED STATES OF THE AMERICAS" "A" instead of "The" is more appropriate as there are two "United States" just in North America (Mexico being the other). Plus obviously not all states in America are united so "Disunited" is fundamentally more accurate. And as in modern times the north and south are treated as separate continents then either "The Amircas" or "North America" is appropriate.
I actually like the renaming it after the two oceans that it touches makes a lot of sense, and makes a good foundation for a name. (Even justifying that whole manifest destiny a little bit) Or using a native word for 'land'. .... or call it Burgerland.
I love the Map Men videos, it is weird that the 2 continents are the Americas but the people of the US are the only ones that consider themselves Americans, everyone else are Candadian, Mexican, Brazilian ect....
Both Columbus AND Vespucci only went to the Caribbean so it shouldn't be named after them. So what about Leifland or Eriksland after Lief Erikson? Again he's only believed to have reached Newfoundland, rather than mainland America. His father Erik the Red discovered Greenland. Perhaps that should be changed to Redland?😀 Mainland North America was officially discovered in 1497 by John Cabot an Italian employed by Henry VIII of Great Britain, technically making it a British discovery😁 So perhaps America should change it's name to Cabotania or Cabotland or maybe Henrysland after his sponsor? However there is a prior claim. In 1170 Welsh Prince, Madog ab Owain Gynwedd, sailed to America. Twice. At least according to folklore. I think Mad dog land has a certain ring to it!🤔🤣🤣🤣
Yeah that whole Christopher Columbus thing is seen as pure bollocks by most historians of today. There's so many videos on youtube on why that doest work. But lets just say that Scandinavian settlements being found that dates back to 500 years before Chris was even born makes it hard to go with that statement. It needs ro be thrown out the window.. The geezer didn't even leave the ship for christ sake.. 😅
"Is Chad a country?" Well, maybe you should pay more attention to a map of Africa, especialy when you have a huge military drone base in the neighbouring Niger from where you may be the next to be kicked out after the French 😏
You say its not like its official then you title the video "American Reacts". I'm assuming you mean from the whole continental landmass, not the nation?
Seems a bit dodgy - places tended to be named based on people's last names or the last name of the numpty who funded the voyage, not the common first name (my upcoming gay bar PeterLand, notwithstanding).
IF the USA had indeed kept the name "British America", we Brits would have eventually required the local government to have removed the "British" prefix, owing to the cringeworthy behaviour of these "Americans"!!
USA is ok for your country but the fact that you call yourselves American is the problem, as all the people from the North and South content of America are Americans. That is the problem. Great video, thanks. 😊 by the way the italians call you " Statinutenci " which I think has a logic.
10:02 - last two alternate names:
- Have A Nice Day
- Land of the Rising Gun
I’m gutted he missed the last one 😂
The Stereophonics have already written the national anthem for the first one.
“Our Graham” is a reference to the game show Blind Date (based on The Dating game) presented by Cilla Black and Graham Skidmore (although you only ever heard Graham’s voice). Cilla would always say something like, “Now, it’s over to our Graham with the scores” and the phrase “our Graham” caught on.
Wow, I never ever thought I'd see "Our Graham" explained, that's blown my mind.
The man that's shouting and ringing a bell was the town crier there was no news papers in hundreds of years ago so the town crier would stand in the streets and ring the bell then he would read the news out to the people 😊
Ohhhhhh I see it now, thanks!
(And now I have the late Cilla's voice in me 'ead, chuck!)
That gave me a lorra lorra laughs.
Over to our Graham for a quick recap! 😂
2:12 the man with the bell is a Town Crier in traditional costume. It's how people got news before printing was invented. Many British towns have one.
Yeah we have one and as you say, alot of towns do have them still.
I also suspect Jay was indoors and superimposed on the background. Someone would have looked.
I suspect it was after printing was invented, but before newspapers were a thing.
Town Criers existed after printing was invented. However, many people were unable to read, unless you had money and paid for schooling. Universal education didn't start till around 1880.
@@paulqueripel3493maybe but I don’t think so. Just British people ignoring him, not unusual.
It's "Edd the Duck" - BBCc hildrens TV presenter, comedian, actor, pop singer, video game star, patron of the Children In Need charity and the UK Olympic team mascot at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.
A legend in his own lifetime.
A poor imitation of Gordon the Gopher, the UK equivalent of Scrappy to Scooby Doo.
Love your reactions to these hilarious map men 😂😂❤
Our Graham is from an old British tv show called Blind Date. The host Cilla Black (same one) would refer to the voice over guy as Our Graham. A quite uniquely British joke
The Town Crier background is Hatton Walk in Enfield Town, North London. In case anyone needs to know this vital piece of information. A trendy little cut-through in an otherwise not-so-trendy town centre. M&S in the background, you can just see the side roof of Pearsons department store, and Clarke's shoes just around the corner. Plenty of places to spend more than you should on stuff. This has been a public information notice.
And when used as a backdrop, could also be known as "Green-screen Land"...
And thanks for the info, I like it when people take the time to do things like that. 😁
Enfield is a dark and sinful place
"Destiny Manifested" is a reference to the racist theory of of "Manifest Destiny" that was a big part of the ideology of American colonization - the belief that the settlers were superior to the native Americans and god wanted them to control the continent.
A couple of other names for consideration: “Guns’r’us” “United Litigation” or you could always give the country a boy band sounding name like “Only profits allowed”. I very much enjoy the fact that you have a sense of humour that includes teasing your country.
Inspired! How about Consumerstan, or The United States of Don't Mess With Us?
Plutocrasia.
02:13 I believe that's actually green screen
Boom Box was my prize possession during the 1990's. I was one of two people in Middle School that had a dual deck boom box. Which was perfect for copying other tapes...
2:05 That person was not vespucci, it was ferdinand magellan, a Portuguese exploror who travelled the entire world by sea
On the other hand ..... Richard ap Meryk, anglicised to Richard Amerike (or Ameryk) (c. 1440-1503) was a British merchant, royal customs officer and later, sheriff of Bristol. Several claims have been made for Amerike by popular writers of the late twentieth century. One was that he was the major funder of the voyage of exploration launched from Bristol by the Venetian John Cabot in 1497, and that Amerike was the owner of Cabot's ship, the Matthew.[1] The other claim revived a theory first proposed in 1908 by a Bristolian scholar and amateur historian, Alfred Hudd. Hudd's theory, greatly elaborated by later writers, suggested that the continental name America was derived from Amerike's surname in gratitude for his sponsorship of Cabot's successful discovery expedition to 'the new World'. However, neither claim is backed up by hard evidence, and the consensus view is that America is named after Amerigo Vespucci, the Italian explorer. Richard ap Meryk was of Welsh origin, hence the ap Meryk (son of Meryk).
This is much more reasonable. Are there any other newly discovered lands that were named after the discoverer's forename?
Very interesting video 📹 ❤
Thanks!!
"I am the God of Hellfire" a one hit wonder for the Crazy World of Arthur Brown.
Turtle Island is a widespread name among Native American tribes for North America or kinda the world among the Northeast Woodlands
07:12 😂😂😂 that was good!
😂
I love your videos. What a soothing voice you have. You should do audio books. Did you also know you have bit of a doppleganger? Goolge Jos Butler England cricket 🏏 he has a nice voice too
Thank you! I looked up Jos Buttler and yeah, I can see it 😂 cheers 🍻
@@JJLAReacts I forgot to say you're both handsome too. Win win for you. Haha
@@JJLAReacts To your comment about Bradley Walsh, he is an actor/comedian/TV presenter and professional laugh corpser. Google Fanny Chmelar/The Chase
Chris Colombus never set foot on what is now the USA 😂. He hit South America and the Carribean Island, but didnt come further North. So I always thought it was strange that the US has a Columbus Day....
The Waldseemuller map was part of my first module in my History degree (which of course in the UK is nothing but history, no maths or languages and whatnot). Can’t remember anything else about the module though
Just “ United States” works well, like “ United Kingdom”
For an alternative name of the USA, Frank Lloyd Wright suggested Usonia. It was in vogue for a short period, and was picked up by Zamenhof, who used it for the Esperanto word for the country. To this day, Esperanto speakers use the work Usono when referring to the US.
Are there actually people who still learn and use Esperanto?!
Also, why the jump from Usonia to Usono?
Would Usonia be pronounced like "You - Sonya" or "OO - Sonya" (like the name Sonia/Sonya etc), or like "OO - Sew - near", "You - SO - nyah"...? something else entirely?!
And with Usono - what pronunciation for that one?
thanks! ☮
@@theinvisibleneonrainbowzeb2567 yes people do still speak and learn Esperanto. The internet has made contact between Esperanto speakers much easier. There are some native speakers of the language as well, the result of two Esperanto speakers who had children together and brought them up multilingually
@@theinvisibleneonrainbowzeb2567 All Esperanto nouns end in -o, so Usonia would have to be tweaked to fit into the Esperanto grammatical system.
Why did I misread that "Disney Manifested" OMG Freudian somethings all over the shop
That would actually be rather a good name.
There's also a theory that the Welsh also landed in the Americas before Columbus. And it was well known around the Bristol area that there was good fishing in the Grand Banks area well before Columbus.
The first Europeans who fished the Grand Banks were actually the Basques. More than a thousand years ago the Basques were marketing salted cod - and never telling anyone where they got them from.
How about the name, "Amerigoland" - which, in the English-speaking world, would be rapidly nicknamed, "Merrygoland"!
I have another suggestion, Trumpton.
The United Tribes Of Ameirca (with tax paper headings reading 'Tribe Called Quest')
Very interesting, cheers!
Here!
That map you said "thumbs down" on, it is a lot better than you probably think, it just is in another projection.
Since I can't be bothered to find out which projection just look up a map centered on canada (or new foundland really) and regardless of (common) projection it should be fairly close.
Ther Mercator projection becomes weirder the further away you are from wherever you centered it (and most commonly this is at the equator)
Yea the mercator projection maps that were used to are all pretty terrible at the poles, we're just used to them.
You need a globe really
wait, what did the people who lived there before call the continent? did they not have a name for the whole thing? did they have maps? i never thought about that...
All good questions! 🤷🏻
As an English person, i do refer to the United states of America as, the USA.
Here's our Graham with a quick recap 😂
Check out bradley walsh best moments from the chase, or bloopers from the chase, Hundreds of compilations around.
Woking is defined as "standing in the kitchen wondering what you came in here for"
That explains why everyone in Woking has a kitchen in their home
In china is 5 continents : asia america africa europe oceania(australia) or 6 with artartida also coutries as : spain italy france greece rumania turkey vietnam indonesia south korea rumania portugal and others coutries
I could be wrong but I think the DUCK is probably "Howard The Duck"
Edd
Nope. Edd the Duck. In the nineties, Edd was the BBC's most famous employee.
Why did you, Mr. "let's pause to see all the hidden jokes", fail to pause the video at 5:47 to read the list of ten most expensive maps ever sold?
Anyway, here's what it says:
1. $10,000,000 for Waldseemuller's "birth certificate of America".
2. 2,600,000 pounds for the first ever map of China (really old).
3. 1,900,000 pounds for a really small map of Babylonia drawn onto a grain of rice.
4. 1,290,000 pounds for the 1972 Apollo 17 mission crew's map of their lunar landing site.
5. 883,000 pounds for the original "Hundred Acre Wood" illustration by E. H. Sheppard.
6. 725,015 pounds for a map to buried treasure worth a million dollars.
7. 540,000 pounds for the Marauder's Map from the set of Harry Potter.
8. 500,000 pounds for a "Big Art Attack" map of Liverpool made out of 25,000 20-pound notes.
9. 340,000 pounds for the A-Z in John Lennon's glovebox.
10. 279,000 pounds for a map of a 3 bed house in Wolverhampton (buyer thought he was buying the house).
There’s a good QI clip about the name of America
Land of The Rising Gun was on point 👉🏻☝🏻
Ah, the United States of Vespuccia. Has a nice ring to it.
When I visited Canada (I'm from UK) I was told that referring to 'Americans' and 'Canadians' as different annoyed the Canadians, who say 'We are ALL Americans!'. Maybe people from the USA need a better name than 'Americans', but 'United Statsians' sounds silly.
Usonian is actually an alternate term
Always thought the most appropriate name for their insular sport is 'United Statesian Hand-Egg'.
as a scandinavian, it's Vineland to me.....
The United States in the Continent of America could refer to both the USA and Mexico (The United Mexican States)
The name of the USA is bit like Germany naming itself the United States of Eurasia....
So, not only did Amerigo Vespucci get a country named after him after his first name, but he also got a beach named after him after his last name!
Does he have a middle name, and if so, what place is named after it!?!? >XD
Who else leaves a 'like' within the first two seconds or so to save time or 'just in case we forget to by the end'?
Obviously we can remove the 'like' if we end up not enjoying the video but in the case of Jago, such a U-turn would be as likely as the Tower Subway reopening.
Has anyone ever told you your voice has a hypnotic quality?
I wish he did ASMR videos 😄
@@TheEmpressEllaseen I thought these *were* ASMR videos...
Did he hypnotise you to say that?
You could always go back to the first Europeans who visited North America, the Vikings, and call yourself Vinland.
Please watch the squarest country video, Jay Foreman
In some languages, apparently, "Americans" (ie citizens of the USA) are known as "United Statesians"...
It's disputed that Columbus underestimated earths size. He might have heard of the report of an irish monk about the viking discoveries,can't remember his name.he wouldn't get money for this ,though.after all the size of earth was known since Erathostenes.
It seems the problem for residents of the United States of America do not know where USA is, certainly some have no idea there is anything beyond their country!
My brother married a Brazilian lady, and this was the first I learned of the "America" controversy. I think I said something horribly offensive (in her view!) by referring to her country as being "in south America". She was very nice about it but it was also VERY clear to me that that was not the correct way to refer to that continent. And between her broken English and my poor Portuguese, I actually don't know how to refer to it at all now. So I'm just going to go ahead and try and be MORE specific!
America is a continent & an American is from the Continent of America.
"I don't think we use the name America" says person from the United States of America.
Mikasuki sounds like what the USA would be in renamed an alternate post-world-W2 where the Japanese took over your nation?
I have always wondered if I’m reality America was derived from merica which is what Britain was names before the true formation of England and the UK
Mohican land has a ring to it 😅
The gunners
There was an attempt to name USA to Freedonia, but it never catched on with the people
Well, you could call it LeifEriksonia. Same principle, just the correct "discoverer". :)
"A DISUNITED STATES OF THE AMERICAS"
"A" instead of "The" is more appropriate as there are two "United States" just in North America (Mexico being the other).
Plus obviously not all states in America are united so "Disunited" is fundamentally more accurate. And as in modern times the north and south are treated as separate continents then either "The Amircas" or "North America" is appropriate.
We definitely say America in the UK 😊
Shout out from Woking! 😂
I favour " Antamazon ".
If your tax forms have FBI on them I'd worry 😂
I actually like the renaming it after the two oceans that it touches makes a lot of sense, and makes a good foundation for a name. (Even justifying that whole manifest destiny a little bit) Or using a native word for 'land'.
.... or call it Burgerland.
Just call it Disneyland
I love the Map Men videos, it is weird that the 2 continents are the Americas but the people of the US are the only ones that consider themselves Americans, everyone else are Candadian, Mexican, Brazilian ect....
It probably has to do with the fact that US Americans monopolised the term American…
Because what else would you call them
@EvieOConnorxoxo that's the point, they have taken ownership of an entire continent and do not accept other from that continent being called Americans
Gunland. Its short easy to remember and represents the thought of the people.
Miccosukee mud pie
Just call it 'United States', that is it's name anyway.
United States (Country) of America (Continent).
But Mexico also call themselves United States but in Spanish.
Both Columbus AND Vespucci only went to the Caribbean so it shouldn't be named after them.
So what about Leifland or Eriksland after Lief Erikson? Again he's only believed to have reached Newfoundland, rather than mainland America. His father Erik the Red discovered Greenland. Perhaps that should be changed to Redland?😀
Mainland North America was officially discovered in 1497 by John Cabot an Italian employed by Henry VIII of Great Britain, technically making it a British discovery😁
So perhaps America should change it's name to Cabotania or Cabotland or maybe Henrysland after his sponsor?
However there is a prior claim. In 1170 Welsh Prince, Madog ab Owain Gynwedd, sailed to America. Twice. At least according to folklore.
I think Mad dog land has a certain ring to it!🤔🤣🤣🤣
Vespucci sailed along significant parts of the the South American coastline, he went to far more than just the Caribbean.
The VIKINGS got there first !!
GRAHAM is pronounced GRAY UM not GRAM !
Hey first (i think) :)
🥇
Chad means lake
This was funny lolllllllll
Yeah that whole Christopher Columbus thing is seen as pure bollocks by most historians of today. There's so many videos on youtube on why that doest work. But lets just say that Scandinavian settlements being found that dates back to 500 years before Chris was even born makes it hard to go with that statement. It needs ro be thrown out the window.. The geezer didn't even leave the ship for christ sake.. 😅
"Is Chad a country?"
Well, maybe you should pay more attention to a map of Africa, especialy when you have a huge military drone base in the neighbouring Niger from where you may be the next to be kicked out after the French 😏
Bradley Walsh... If he's English he must be a good actor...
You might think. You would not be correct.
columbus DID NOT DISCOVER AMERICA.
Ypu forget one last name "land of the Rising Gun"
Hail , Hail Freedonia! Land of the Brave and Free!
Guns 'n Poses; The Borderless Paradise; Fentanyl Farm.
You say its not like its official then you title the video "American Reacts". I'm assuming you mean from the whole continental landmass, not the nation?
Woking would be fairly accurate, assuming it would mean "WithOut-(a)-king"!
“New India”
The duck: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edd_the_Duck
I genuinely wonder if more Brits can find America on a map than Americans can find America on a map.
Seems a bit dodgy - places tended to be named based on people's last names or the last name of the numpty who funded the voyage, not the common first name (my upcoming gay bar PeterLand, notwithstanding).
Likely called it the West Indies because he had sailed West
Sarcasm seems to be lost on Americans….
IF the USA had indeed kept the name "British America", we Brits would have eventually required the local government to have removed the "British" prefix, owing to the cringeworthy behaviour of these "Americans"!!
Welcome to the English psychie
outed himself as an FIB shill
Woking! , brilliant land of the woke, I'm from Woking Surrey UK
Columbus got it wrong because he was a nob 😂
USA is ok for your country but the fact that you call yourselves American is the problem, as all the people from the North and South content of America are Americans. That is the problem. Great video, thanks. 😊 by the way the italians call you " Statinutenci " which I think has a logic.
United States of Columbus would be WRONG! United States of Indigenous people, like they changed the name of Columbus Day.
The reason he called them them west indies is explained at the start. Rewind a bit.🙄
Notindia