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An Jiyoung Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Country Name

0America, U.S.A., U.S., United States02br
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00British, England, United Kingdom02br
02br
00I know the above country names are same. 02br
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00Are they using differently in the sentence? Can I just use them exactly same occasion on the sentence?0-
  

Top answer

0British, England, United Kingdom02br 02br 00Oh so 01b 01i 00not02i 02b 00 the same! Please look them up. 0-

  • 0British, England, United Kingdom02br 02br 00Oh so 01b 01i 00not02i 02b 00 the same!
  • Please look them up.
  • 0-
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4 Answers
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0British, England, United Kingdom02br
02br
00Oh so 01b01i00not02i02b00 the same! Please look them up. Before there's a riot.0-
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0Thank you for your answer.02br
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00I didn't fully understand your answer or maybe my question was unclear.02br
02br
00For example, Amercia, United States, and U.S.A. are all the name of one country. 02br
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00I am wondering if these names is used in the sentence differently or preference of usage.. 0-
0
0 Normally we should use the term America to refer to the continent and not only to hte United States of America.02br
00But very often The United States, the USA and America refer to the same entity. You must keep in mind that they all have a singular meaning (you would say "the USA is ...").0-
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0 British, England, United Kingdom02br
02br
00England is a part of the United Kingdom of England and Scotland, and is a country within the island of Great Britain. 02br
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00Both Britain and England are sometimes used to refer to the nation, but you have to be careful of your usage. The Scots and the Welsh do not appreciate being regarded as part of Engl

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