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Revision as of 00:08, 4 April 2006 editDeacon of Pndapetzim (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators39,746 editsm tried to fix issue; the article has only a few sentences, editing the problem is far more useful than dumping a tag on it← Previous edit Revision as of 02:54, 4 April 2006 edit undoStringops (talk | contribs)214 edits try to NPOV a littleNext edit →
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'''Scotlandshire''' is a term sometimes used to denote either the ] of ] or Scotland's perceived ] with ]. By placing the suffix ''-]'' after the nation's name, there is a ] of the ] tendency to place the word ''-]'' after many ancient Scottish regions, as well as a tongue-in-cheek implication that Scotland has the status of an ], rather than that of a distinct ]. Hence, the term is very often political in nature, and may bne regarded as pejorative. '''Scotlandshire''' is a term sometimes used to denote either the ] of ] or the ] with ] that some percieve Scotland as having. By placing the suffix ''-]'' after the nation's name, the term attempts to ] the ] tendency to place the word ''-]'' after some ancient Scottish regions, as well as implicating in a tongue-in-cheek manner that Scotland has the status of an ], rather than that of a distinct ]. Hence, the term is very often political in nature, and may be regarded as pejorative{{fact}}.

Several historic, former ] regions of Scotland have at times had the word ''-shire'' added when Scotland broadly adopted the ] system of England during the 15th-18th centuries:


Several historic, ] regions of Scotland have at times had the redundant word ''-shire'' added:
*Argyll - Argyllshire *Argyll - Argyllshire
*Bute - Buteshire *Bute - Buteshire

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Scotlandshire is a term sometimes used to denote either the anglicization of Scotland or the subordinate political relationship with England that some percieve Scotland as having. By placing the suffix -shire after the nation's name, the term attempts to parody the early modern tendency to place the word -shire after some ancient Scottish regions, as well as implicating in a tongue-in-cheek manner that Scotland has the status of an English county, rather than that of a distinct nation. Hence, the term is very often political in nature, and may be regarded as pejorative.

Several historic, former comital regions of Scotland have at times had the word -shire added when Scotland broadly adopted the county system of England during the 15th-18th centuries:

  • Argyll - Argyllshire
  • Bute - Buteshire
  • Moray - Morayshire
  • Ross - Ross-shire

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