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Anonymous Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Britishness is a compound, not a mixture

Filling in the census recently, I hesitated before choosing British over English from the menu of national identities. The correct answer is both. Team GB for the Olympics, England for the World Cup. After that, it gets hard to separate the different cultural elements that connect me to the country in which I was born but that my immigrant parents chose. In the chemistry of belonging, Britishness is a compound, not a mixture.

What is the exact difference in meaning between compound and mixture in the context above?

  

Top answer

anonymous What is the exact difference in meaning between compound and mixture in the context above? He mentions chemistry figuratively, so we are supposed to refer to that. In a compound, the elements that make it up bond together in fixed proportion.

  • anonymous What is the exact difference in meaning between compound and mixture in the context above?
  • He mentions chemistry figuratively, so we are supposed to refer to that.
  • In a compound, the elements that make it up bond together in fixed proportion.
  • In a mixture, the substances that make it up are uniformly distributed, blended into each other.
  • It's not a great analogy, but he means that the elements England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland have bonded together to form the compound Britain.
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anonymousWhat is the exact difference in meaning between compound and mixture in the context above?

He mentions chemistry figuratively, so we are supposed to refer to that. In a compound, the elements that make it up bond together in fixed proportion. In a mixture, the substances that make it up are uniformly distributed, blended into each other. It's not a

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