Pride_Of_The_Midlands Posted 11 October 2013 Posted 11 October 2013 I am yeah. Sterling is Jamaican and Zaha is Ivorian. Though listening to their accents they are probably from Los Angeles. Listening to their accents they are from London which is in England, ergo they are English.
21st Century Fox Posted 11 October 2013 Posted 11 October 2013 So are you saying that Zaha and Sterling are not English? How you divined that from a comment about Christian Vieri as an example of how an accent means nothing to your nationality, I'm not quite sure.
Guest Bilo Posted 11 October 2013 Posted 11 October 2013 I could play for Scotland under the grandparent rule, even though it's the only country in the British Isles I've never visited. I just thought I'd add that, no idea what point I'm trying to make.
Uncle Albert Posted 12 October 2013 Posted 12 October 2013 So she went grew up in and went to school in England. She probably doesn't even remember living in Scotland, I would say her primary nationality is English and her secondary nationality is Scottish. Well she can remember living in Scotland and her first year of schooling was in Scotland, so you're wrong. You're a very silly person, you've made yourself look a complete helmet and you've done the worse thing possible and tried to defend your daft argument. Face it now, you're wrong, you cannot define a persons nationality on an accent, that is ludicrous. A few years when you grow up you may have this conversation crop up again and you will realise what a fool you were to even think this way.
Pride_Of_The_Midlands Posted 12 October 2013 Posted 12 October 2013 I'm not saying it's 100% accurate but it's probably the best indicator.
Uncle Albert Posted 12 October 2013 Posted 12 October 2013 I'm not saying it's 100% accurate but it's probably the best indicator. Why does a nationality of the average person need to be indicated?
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