Americans Shouldn't Be Called American

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Name Explain

Name Explain

Жыл бұрын

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SOURCES & FURTHER READING
Demonyms: www.thoughtco.com/the-names-o...
Demonyms For The United States: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demonym...
US States Demonyms: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...

Пікірлер: 4 300
@NameExplain
@NameExplain Жыл бұрын
What demonym do you think people from the USA should use?
@OfficialBlackstoneProductions
@OfficialBlackstoneProductions Жыл бұрын
Fredonian/Stateser
@avaraportti1873
@avaraportti1873 Жыл бұрын
Yank
@xelzoid
@xelzoid Жыл бұрын
US Americans
@modmaker7617
@modmaker7617 Жыл бұрын
"American" when speaking to people IRL and "US-American" when speaking to people online that dislike the people of the USA being called by the former demonym.
@jo_winston
@jo_winston Жыл бұрын
How about 'mericans from United States of' Merica
@SuicV
@SuicV Жыл бұрын
Brazilian here, the terms "norte americano" and "estadunidense" are not necessarily the most widly used ones (at least not by a large margin), but they are common enough, and just "americano" (american) can be used just for the US or for the whole continent, depending on the context. "Estadunidense" seems to be the most common in academic literature, and "norte americano" can be ambiguous for also pontencially including Canada and Mexico
@heronimousbrapson863
@heronimousbrapson863 Жыл бұрын
Norte Americano could also refer to Canadians, as Canada is also part of North America as well.
@SuicV
@SuicV Жыл бұрын
@@heronimousbrapson863 Yes, as well as Mexico, just like I said
@marna_li
@marna_li Жыл бұрын
Personally, I would use "American" in the broader sense of all "peoples of the Americas". It depends on context. But it shows that how people from other parts of the world view the term "American" is not necessarily the same in the rest of the Americas. But the reason for people of the US calling themselves "Americans" is historical, with the migrations an all, and thus it is reserved to them, at least in the English language and languages of people from countries which they came. Originally, meant as "of/belonging to America". As "my American family members".
@bennythetiger6052
@bennythetiger6052 Жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@helloxonsfan
@helloxonsfan Жыл бұрын
I often tell people that I don't live in America, I live in New York. 👍 🙂 🇺🇲
@smert_ditto
@smert_ditto Жыл бұрын
Mexican here, when it comes to referring to people from the US, what's most common is "gringo" for everyday talk, and estadounidense if you're writing something more formal. I've never seen "Norteamericano" be used because most Mexicans see The Americas as a single continent, and when we do use the term "North America", we mean the US, Canada, and Mexico
@jakephreel
@jakephreel Жыл бұрын
Don't be calling us Gringo's just because you're jealous you're whole family is trying to flee here
@mariotheundying
@mariotheundying Жыл бұрын
@@jakephreel "don't call us American just because your family is trying to flee here" It's just a way to call someone from a certain country, more commonly the USA, if you're triggered by it then that's your problem
@alvarocostaalves
@alvarocostaalves Жыл бұрын
@@jakephreel it's just a word, just like your "Mexican"
@baronvonjo1929
@baronvonjo1929 Жыл бұрын
Gringo is probably the most offensive term you could call many of us. I automatically assume your a racist and xenophobe. Because the people who use the term means it to be rude and derogatory. It is meant to bring down others. It's a term along with many others that needs to not be accepted.
@mariotheundying
@mariotheundying Жыл бұрын
@@baronvonjo1929 its a term to refer to a person, it's like saying that someone is immigrant, so that word is offensive too, and you're the one being racist because apparently saying gringo is racist, assuming that Americans are only a single race, so you're excluding people like black people for example from term American, the people who use the term mean it in a normal way, if you're offended by it then that's your own fault
@terabytes11
@terabytes11 Жыл бұрын
Hey there, Costa Rican here! "Estadounidense" is most definitely a very utilized word for calling a person from the USA. So much so that I don't really hear anyone saying "americano" in my daily life (though there probably is people). "Norteamericano" is also a fairly used word too. We also have "gringo" which can certainly be derogatory for some US people but over time we kinda forgot it was offensive and used it more in a more friendly manner jeje. Personally, when I'm talking in English I jokingly like to call Americans "usasians", just think it's really goofy
@mariotheundying
@mariotheundying Жыл бұрын
Idk if gringo was bad before but it isn't now and if someone is triggered by it then it's their problem
@SpecterDiego
@SpecterDiego Жыл бұрын
@@mariotheundying they probably should find why we say these things and realize we dont say it just cause we hate them, but due to what they did to us
@malvinas78
@malvinas78 Жыл бұрын
I’m Gringo, and I don’t mind. My parents immigrated here from Argentina, but I was born in the USA which makes me full blooded Gringo.
@I_am_somebody_1234
@I_am_somebody_1234 Жыл бұрын
Que onda mae, happy to see another tico here :D
@terabytes11
@terabytes11 Жыл бұрын
@@SpecterDiego idk bro i never find people with any ulterior implication of using the word other than just calling a usasian
@CarloCorvaglia
@CarloCorvaglia Жыл бұрын
Also in italian we have "statunitense" as a demonym for americans. Typically used to avoid repetition of words or in more formal contexts (like on wikipedia).
@AsukaLangleyS02
@AsukaLangleyS02 Жыл бұрын
Taking any advice from the country that allied with Hitler is laughably bad.
@alexanderfretheim5720
@alexanderfretheim5720 Жыл бұрын
Yeah what I don't like about that though is its about the United States, which is just one government that has existed here, and will probably not exist here at some point in the future. America as a nation really begins in the 1600's, long before there is a United States.
@josephabellojr
@josephabellojr Жыл бұрын
@@alexanderfretheim5720 America as a nation didn't exist before America as a nation existed... what are you on about brother. Before there was a UNITED STATES OF AMERICA there was no such thing as an American Nation. At that point in time America only meant the continent of America, it only started meaning someone from the United States of America when the USA was created, and then the continents were divided in two in the English language to avoid confusion.
@alexanderfretheim5720
@alexanderfretheim5720 Жыл бұрын
@@josephabellojr The United States is the country, not the nation. The nation begins in the 1600's. Or have you never heard of Plymouth Rock?
@alexanderfretheim5720
@alexanderfretheim5720 Жыл бұрын
@@josephabellojr The United States is just a constitution, a "union of states". It's a sovereign law and that is it. The actual nation is America, and it has existed since the 1600's. In the case of France, the nation is France, which is ancient, while the country is the Fifth Republic, which has existed since 1958. Since they are coterminous, both America and the United States can be referred to as a nationstate. Nationstates are so common in today's world that we tend to sometimes use the words nation and country interchangeably, but a nation is a people whereas a country is a sovereign jurisdiction of law.
@NickPoeschek
@NickPoeschek Жыл бұрын
As a Canadian, I have no issue calling people from the US as American. I actually find it more annoying when people from Europe “correct” me online about how Canadians are also Americans. This happens far more often than I would have expected.
@EricaGamet
@EricaGamet Жыл бұрын
As an American who loves my Canadian friends, I wouldn't want anyone (Europeans or otherwise) to call you Canadians Americans... I'd get offended if I were Canadian and that happened... haha! I did, however, pretend to be Canadian on my solo backpack trip to the UK back in the 90s. Heh.
@roxxxydubois
@roxxxydubois Жыл бұрын
@@EricaGamet I couldn't pass for being canadian my southern accent is too strong
@EricaGamet
@EricaGamet Жыл бұрын
@@roxxxydubois Just tell people you're from Southern Canada, eh.
@AsukaLangleyS02
@AsukaLangleyS02 Жыл бұрын
@@EricaGamet So you hid your identity as an American? Not very patriotic or American of you.
@EricaGamet
@EricaGamet Жыл бұрын
@@AsukaLangleyS02 I don't feel the need to shout my patriotism from the rooftops, so I'm not worried. If you've ever traveled to other countries, you've seen how we are perceived. In fact, I was on a small, local tour in Scotland... and there was an American family there we all dubbed The Griswolds. Telling people I was Canadian didn't give them any stereotypical preconceived notions about me.
@Vengir
@Vengir Жыл бұрын
When you think about it, the EU has a similar problem, where the adjective referring to something of the EU is "European", and yet they don't encompass the whole continent of Europe.
@Vrealita
@Vrealita Жыл бұрын
Good point. I think this is the most approximate example possible. With the exception made that the EU is potentially an all-encompassing pan-european ideal, while USA isn't
@bennythetiger6052
@bennythetiger6052 Жыл бұрын
Interesting, although I think the issue is kind of more faint when it comes to conitnental classifications, as those are naturally arbitrary...
@Vengir
@Vengir Жыл бұрын
@@bennythetiger6052 The whole problem is the US using the name "America", even though they don't encompass the entire continent of America. It's essentially the same thing. There are countries that are not in the EU, but that are nonetheless in Europe, even if you use the least generous definition of what "Europe" is, and that includes not recognizing Europe as a separate continent (as even then you would need to acknowledge that there is an area of the world called "Europe" in Eurasia or Afroeurasia).
@TheFlyfly
@TheFlyfly Жыл бұрын
if i wanted to refer to someone from specifically the EU and not the rest of Europe, i'd say something like "from the EU" instead of "European".
@viewer-of-content
@viewer-of-content Жыл бұрын
@@Vrealita Manifest Destiny would disagree with, "E.U. potentially represents all of Europe, while the USA doesn't." So would the Monroe doctrine or many interventions since. I do not often like many of the reasons my nation interferes with other Nations from the Americas, but saying the "American" name rooted in 1800's imperial ambitions wasn't rooted in ideals or intentional is be blind to a few dozen wars, (ignoring the hundreds of indian wars the usa fought.) Wars or War-like Actions include: Panamanian indipendance, Mexico 3 times, CIA coups for everyone, Canada twice, Spain twice, Cuba, several island nations, Haiti a number of times, the British Twice, and lots of other weird stuff. Also Billions and Billions in trade, aid, and investment are done yearly. I forget how much of USA trade is from the Americas, but i know that Mexico and Canada have remained in the top 3 or 4 trading partners for 30years usually beating China.
@marianocenteno4603
@marianocenteno4603 Жыл бұрын
im from Argentina, and yeah, we call them "estadounidense" because its simple and concise enough, in almost slang ultra casual you can also hear "yanqui" with mostly no ill intent, mostly because most of us don't even really care(or know) about the etymology of the word, it has been adopted as a informal way to call someone from the united states
@aruakise9803
@aruakise9803 Жыл бұрын
Being fair yankee lost its derogatory power immediately given the US Revolutionary Armies openly took the term either pride especially in the North. And the last ones to use it as an insult in anyway (disregarding sports/city rivalry stuff) were the slave holding losers.
@Dora-xi5ob
@Dora-xi5ob 10 ай бұрын
Ok then imma call Hispanics/Latinos “b3aners” and “w3tbacks”
@Uriel4-9-476
@Uriel4-9-476 9 ай бұрын
@@Dora-xi5ob Do it I dont care. We are not 'Hispanic', neither 'Latino'. We are Argentinians. The worst thing that you can call us is Nazi's, probably. Because you dont even know where our country is.
@Dora-xi5ob
@Dora-xi5ob 9 ай бұрын
@@Uriel4-9-476 y’all get mad when we call y’all “Latinx”
@Uriel4-9-476
@Uriel4-9-476 9 ай бұрын
I don't give a fuck, because im not a "Latinx people". Cope and seethe.
@QuelloDelleIntro
@QuelloDelleIntro Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: Here in Italy we call people from United States, "Statunistense", we even use use "Americano" but it's not as used es the other one
@Wahrheit_
@Wahrheit_ Жыл бұрын
Spanish and Italian sister languages
@beasley1232
@beasley1232 Жыл бұрын
I have never heard a Italian person call Americans that, most Italians I meet must refer to ppl from the US just simply American.
@Wahrheit_
@Wahrheit_ Жыл бұрын
@@beasley1232 Many times, in order not to confuse them, they just say "American". But it doesn't mean they don't use other words
@ashleylentz2651
@ashleylentz2651 Жыл бұрын
Love how you missed a 4th country with United in the name: México
@tohfawalker159
@tohfawalker159 Жыл бұрын
You also have the United Republic of Tanzania If you want to go to Union countries too then you also have the Republic of the Union of Myanmar and the Union of the Comoros
@ambiguoussarcasm
@ambiguoussarcasm Жыл бұрын
@überguy No. It's United States of Mexico.
@Vrealita
@Vrealita Жыл бұрын
@@ambiguoussarcasm No. It's "United Mexican States", which is not the same!
@xavyre
@xavyre Жыл бұрын
United States of Brazil too.
@ashleylentz2651
@ashleylentz2651 Жыл бұрын
@@Vrealita it's "United Mexican States" when translated to English. but then, it would be "United American States" too. in Spanish, the name is "Estados Unidos Mexicanos". just some fun facts.
@azraieruslim
@azraieruslim Жыл бұрын
"Americans" should be used the same way people use "Europeans".
@everettatwater2939
@everettatwater2939 Жыл бұрын
no because there is two Americas south and north. there is only one group of people known as American and they are from the United States of America
@user-id4oi3hl7b
@user-id4oi3hl7b Жыл бұрын
Except there is no continent “America”. Unless you think Africa, Asia, and Europe are just one continent too
@Adrian4239
@Adrian4239 Жыл бұрын
Tienes razón y soy de Ecuador! 😀🤚🇪🇨
@RingsOfSolace
@RingsOfSolace Жыл бұрын
English doesn't recognize a single continent called America
@Tacocat7420
@Tacocat7420 Жыл бұрын
Is it not
@juandhiego
@juandhiego Жыл бұрын
I'm American and live in Honduras (Central America). Estadounidense is like the right way to go but people just call us "gringo" (male) and "gringa" (female) most times. Whenever I want to say I'm American without using "American", I go with "I'm from the United States" or "I'm from the US", etc.
@randlebrowne2048
@randlebrowne2048 Жыл бұрын
Yet one more reason for us Texans to keep identifying as "Texans" internationally!
@juandhiego
@juandhiego Жыл бұрын
@@randlebrowne2048 Yes! I'm from Florida and that's also a good way to identify. The thing is that some states are recognized internationally more than others like New York, California, Texas, Florida. If I said I'm from Idaho, most people outside of the US would have no idea what that is lol.
@Wahrheit_
@Wahrheit_ Жыл бұрын
@@juandhiego who wouldn't know Idaho? i mean im not from the US so
@juandhiego
@juandhiego Жыл бұрын
@@Wahrheit_ Believe me, there's lots of people who can't even name a single state lol
@Wahrheit_
@Wahrheit_ Жыл бұрын
@@juandhiego lmao, I guess i know because i like to study all that stuff 🤓👍
@JGruber
@JGruber Жыл бұрын
Back in the day, my Junior or senior year of high school we had a Venezuelan exchange student. One day he was telling us about an exchange he got into with a local when he called himself an American... The local refused to accept he was American. "Yeah, I'm from Venezuela!" "SEE! YOUR NOT AMERICAN!" "yes I am... Venezuela is in South America, so technically"
@axxel_o
@axxel_o 7 ай бұрын
Totally that is right and is geography correct and logic
@shinshoryu
@shinshoryu 4 ай бұрын
What high school was that?
@ChristoAbrie
@ChristoAbrie Жыл бұрын
in Afrikaans we have a particular conundrum regarding the demonyms. the name of the language literally translates as "from Africa", but the people who speak it have adopted it as their cultural identity especially with the term "Afrikaner" (Afrikaner refers to a single person, while also being a colloquial term referring to the descendants of the Dutch Settlers, ie Afrikaans-speaking white people). both terms almost exclusively refer to people who speak Afrikaans as their native language. however, the demonym for a African-born person (especially Black people) is also technically "Afrikaans". We apply the same rules to other countries that end in "-can", so "American" becomes "Amerikaans/Amerikaner" and "South Africa" becomes "Suid-Afrikaans/Afrikaner". in order to distinguish the Black Africans and non-Afrikaans speaking white people from the Afrikaans-speaking population, we refer to them as "Afrika-mense" (African people) and Engelse Suid-Afrikaners (English-speaking South Africans).
@ElectrostatiCrow
@ElectrostatiCrow Жыл бұрын
I remember hearing about that. lol
@superafrikanmedialabs8237
@superafrikanmedialabs8237 Жыл бұрын
Enemy!!!
@Ghibli_73
@Ghibli_73 Жыл бұрын
Ngikufisela usuku oluhle/Lekker dag
@ElectrostatiCrow
@ElectrostatiCrow Жыл бұрын
@@Ghibli_73 Nawe. Mntwana wakithi. 😁
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
Africa is a country & African is a citizenship if America is a country & American is a citizenship.
@grandmarshallkingwolfman420
@grandmarshallkingwolfman420 Жыл бұрын
In English it's American. Words can mean more than one thing. One can say American and mean someone from either continent in the Americas as well as someone from the USA. I don't understand why that is an issue. Let's say someone is from Honduras and goes to Paris, let's say. If asked what their nationality is why would they identify with their continent and not their nation? It makes zero sense. I respect that in SPANISH we are called Estadunidenses, but in English it's American. I would prefer to identify with my city or state than use a term like Usonian or United Statesian.
@shawnv123
@shawnv123 Жыл бұрын
it has to do with the anti usism of people bitching about the demonym of the us is the name of an entire continent
@Nelle606
@Nelle606 Жыл бұрын
This. If I'm in Mexico or Peru, I say estadounidense because I was taught that's the proper term. All countries or languages have the opportunity to create their own words for things - so I don't understand why it would be unfair for English to use the work American to refer to the people or things from the USA. We have different words/terms when referring to the region of The Americas - North American, South American, New World, Pan American... so there isn't any confusion. Also worth noting that for most of Latin America, they consider North and South America to be one continent and not two - so that probably adds to the confusion. Same as how some nations consider Europe and Asia to be one continent and not two, but it isn't unfair that English people don't call themselves Eurasian.
@krono5el
@krono5el Жыл бұрын
More simple is they are just europeans in america and real Americans are the Natives. we call europeans in any of the Americas eruo-americans if they are not Native.
@geografisica
@geografisica Жыл бұрын
So why people still use these phrases?: “he is African”, “she is an European girl”, “they love Asian food”. You have not understood how big is this issue regarding the identity for those living in The Americas.
@Nelle606
@Nelle606 Жыл бұрын
@@geografisica When has anyone, when speaking English, been confused by someone saying "she's an American girl"? In English, no one would ever say something is American and mean it came from Canada or Argentina or anywhere other than the US. And, in English, North America and South America are separate continents - so you would refer to things as North or South American if you were referring to the whole continent. It's pretty rare to need to speak about the entirety of The Americas - it's usually only done politically or historically and there are terms specific to that in English. So I'm not sure what the issue is.
@paullangland6877
@paullangland6877 Жыл бұрын
I remember for a while, there was a small group of people calling us the United Statesians but anyone who used that term usually were very smug about it.
@ErikPT
@ErikPT Жыл бұрын
Because it's ridiculous stright up bloody awful.
@MyOddThoughts
@MyOddThoughts Жыл бұрын
I'll just stick with American.
@justoad
@justoad Жыл бұрын
At least it's less confusing than the term "American."
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
America is a continent, not a country. An American is from the Continent of America.
@paullangland6877
@paullangland6877 Жыл бұрын
@@justoad I usually just say "US American" because United Statesian doesn't roll off the tongue nicely and it's kind of smug.
@highway2heaven91
@highway2heaven91 Жыл бұрын
It’s quite interesting that we sometimes use the term US to refer to something belonging to the USA instead of American for a lot of things. Such as US Dollars, US Border, US Soil, US Senate, US Person, US President, etc. In fact I think that is the official term that is used by the government, not “American”.
@thelordz33
@thelordz33 Жыл бұрын
As someone who's father is from Indiana and lived there for 5 years, Hoosier is pronounced "who-zher" not "who-zi-er".
@Nick-zl5xf
@Nick-zl5xf Жыл бұрын
As a Hoosiers, I back this
@lanaskye2380
@lanaskye2380 Жыл бұрын
I guess you really know Hoosier daddy! ...Sorry, I had to.
@omargerardolopez3294
@omargerardolopez3294 Жыл бұрын
Zh like the french j?
@Coleo20
@Coleo20 Жыл бұрын
@@omargerardolopez3294 Exactly, like in "Je suis un Hoosier".
@Nick-zl5xf
@Nick-zl5xf Жыл бұрын
@@omargerardolopez3294 yes
@hackycrema
@hackycrema Жыл бұрын
Here in Peru we call them estadunidense mostly. Also Norteamericano but I think that’s most used in Central American countries and Mexico .
@hackycrema
@hackycrema Жыл бұрын
@@everettatwater2939 mmm yeah so
@codex4102
@codex4102 Жыл бұрын
@@everettatwater2939 si y ??
@Adrian4239
@Adrian4239 Жыл бұрын
En Ecuador también! 😀🤚🇪🇨
@redzard2015
@redzard2015 Жыл бұрын
@@Adrian4239 E=Eso C=C Tilin
@angelruiz4340
@angelruiz4340 Жыл бұрын
Nope most prople in mexico call them "Gringos" Not North Americans because Mexico is also part of North America
@axelprino
@axelprino Жыл бұрын
Here in Argentina is more common to hear "Yanqui" (Yankee) in casual conversation with "Estadounidense" and "Norteamericano" being more formal, and many people do consider it incorrect or even a bit offensive to refer to an US citizen as "Americano". The one we definitely don't use is "Gringo" since here "gringo" usually means blonde or it can even refer to someone of German descent.
@AsukaLangleyS02
@AsukaLangleyS02 Жыл бұрын
Yankee is only for people from New England. What a stupid suggestion.
@Vrealita
@Vrealita Жыл бұрын
Also, northern Italian descent in the case of Gringo
@axelprino
@axelprino Жыл бұрын
@@AsukaLangleyS02 I wasn't suggesting it, I was just pointing out a thing that happens, it's not like neither you or me can change how the dialect works. It is what it is, and it isn't that rare for a name that originally only applied to one region to later get generalized to a whole country.
@pueseslucca
@pueseslucca Жыл бұрын
I’m Argentinian and my friends & I def use gringo jsjs
@Cody-5501
@Cody-5501 Жыл бұрын
Yankee refers to people from the north east coast using it to define any American is kinda wrong as you wouldn’t call everyone a midwesterner or a Californian
@walterbackgammon8436
@walterbackgammon8436 Жыл бұрын
American here, I can confirm that we are in fact Americans
@johnwinter2252
@johnwinter2252 Жыл бұрын
Snaciremas
@Areliableguy
@Areliableguy Жыл бұрын
Ya hell ya
@papalachappa674
@papalachappa674 Жыл бұрын
@user-mx8ne3bu9nyeah our continent
@AnimatedStuffCountryballs
@AnimatedStuffCountryballs Жыл бұрын
@Marty Yo No, North America is a continent and South America as a continent not the entire thing
@ryufox.hace10anos88
@ryufox.hace10anos88 Жыл бұрын
​​​@@AnimatedStuffCountryballs North west Easy south there's still the same América 🤡 Is just the a Us concept to exclude people From others countrys That concept Is only used in US but un the most countrys of América like latam use the concept of one América and the other a sub divition not important Is just like a votation 👈🤡
@ca_marchant86
@ca_marchant86 Жыл бұрын
In spanish “estadounidense” is more common than “americano”. Also in french is common the term “états-unien” than “américain”. In South America it can be rude to use the term “americano” when referring only to the USA. There’s a song by Residente called “This is not America” who refers to this polemic from a latin perspective.
@chadosukuaro7296
@chadosukuaro7296 Жыл бұрын
Same here in Italy where the official endonym for people or things from The US is "Statunitense".
@AsukaLangleyS02
@AsukaLangleyS02 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a cope from trashy South America
@everettatwater2939
@everettatwater2939 Жыл бұрын
you're a north American and an American
@mezzmar
@mezzmar Жыл бұрын
@@everettatwater2939 yeah right, he's from Florida
@joseloera5849
@joseloera5849 Жыл бұрын
@@everettatwater2939 Dude the Américas is a single continent, all the latin world knows the new world as America.
@arthuruppiano3211
@arthuruppiano3211 Жыл бұрын
In the rare event that you need to refer to someone or something pertaining to the Americas as a whole--and not specifically the U.S., North America, or South America--couldn't you simply say "pan-American" to avoid any confusion?
@historicalperspective
@historicalperspective Жыл бұрын
very true sir
@shotyew1435
@shotyew1435 Жыл бұрын
I usually just say “The Americas” or “The New World”
@jbach2002
@jbach2002 Жыл бұрын
I say the Americas
@omargerardolopez3294
@omargerardolopez3294 Жыл бұрын
pan-american would imply that it comes from every part of America, so it wouldn't be used in some context
@geografisica
@geografisica Жыл бұрын
Pan American is still confusing, because it has “American” on it, and the rest of the World would still think is just the US.
@MrCody6925
@MrCody6925 Жыл бұрын
As an American it is common to hear us refer to our friends and some family as asshole so I use that. 😂😂
@MuriKakari
@MuriKakari Жыл бұрын
Weirdly, I think that's the proposed one we'd be most likely to go for.
@wifi961
@wifi961 Жыл бұрын
Lol
@MrCody6925
@MrCody6925 Жыл бұрын
@@MuriKakari Agreed. Lol
@random3250
@random3250 Жыл бұрын
We like being called American. We get its not really correct, but, its most commonly used and by far the most accepted term by people that live in the US. In english, anyway. i still vibe with other languages not using a form of american
@julietab-ej6cl
@julietab-ej6cl 8 ай бұрын
U sure?
@damackabet.4611
@damackabet.4611 4 ай бұрын
​@@julietab-ej6clI mean the other two common terms are southerner or Yankee in usa for their people or Texan which are both Texan and southern. Unless you want to call people from usa by their state/region name I suggest just using american as we all still agree we're americans at least for now.
@ShuajoX
@ShuajoX Жыл бұрын
In English though, the demonym "American" has been used since the colonial period, before it was ever used to apply to anybody else. There's no reason to change it now just because somebody has an axe to grind.
@Vrealita
@Vrealita Жыл бұрын
In Spanish language, also in colonial times Spanish Americans from the whole continent were called "Americanos", so as to differentiate them from "European (Peninsular)" Spanish people. So the "American" identity also predates the Independence of Hispanic American nations and it is a unique identifier that give us the sense of a common belonging, as well as a shared history and struggles.
@ShuajoX
@ShuajoX Жыл бұрын
@@Vrealita That's really interesting! Thanks for sharing.
@innocentsmith6091
@innocentsmith6091 Жыл бұрын
@@Vrealita That's nice, but we're speaking English, not Spanish. We're not americanos. We're Americans. They are cognates, but not the same word.
@rodrigosantosvaleriano1859
@rodrigosantosvaleriano1859 Жыл бұрын
@@innocentsmith6091 I would rather say they translate each other. They could be used differently, but dictionary wise would be the equivalent in the other language. I don't mind how the word "American" is used though.
@TheKeksadler
@TheKeksadler Жыл бұрын
I think the core of the issue is that unlike many other regions in the Americas, the US didn't have a "secondary name" by the British during the colonial period as the region was just known as "the Thirteen Colonies". So with no other pan-state demonym that wouldn't upset parts of the country, "American" just became the defacto term.
@limeangelo6019
@limeangelo6019 Жыл бұрын
Chilean Southerner here, we use the term "estadounidense" as the default american denonym, though "north american" is mostly used in terms of canda and US as a general cultural area as you might've guessed. Calling someone "americano" might give you some seconds of confused looks, people here dont associate "americano/a" with being from the US since its such a borad term, so it might take some time for them to figure it out. Even when we have a whole section of clothing called "Ropa Americana" (american clothing) most people struggle to make the connection, including myself for most of my life. Im not sure how things are in the big cities, since i live in a pretty rural area. Yankee is mostly used by older folk (anyone above 35) to refer to anyone coming from the states though its usage in recent times has declined. Gringo has been and continues to be the generally used term for any european-looking foreigner at least here, from italian, german, canadian to brittish anyone with fair skin that doesnt speak your tounge can be considered a gringo.
@Dora-xi5ob
@Dora-xi5ob 10 ай бұрын
"Gringo" is a racial slur. How about we start calling people from Latin American countries "B3aners” or “w3tbacks”
@Uriel4-9-476
@Uriel4-9-476 9 ай бұрын
@@Dora-xi5ob Gringo, cope harder.
@Dora-xi5ob
@Dora-xi5ob 9 ай бұрын
@@Uriel4-9-476 so gringo means foreigner? Then why is it used by Hispanics IN THE US to refer to white Americans or Hispanics who are not culturally Hispanic?
@Uriel4-9-476
@Uriel4-9-476 9 ай бұрын
@@Dora-xi5ob I don't care what they do. In my country we don't use that stupid ass mexican word. It's funny because you get angry by it. I would use yankees for your people
@dfunited1
@dfunited1 Жыл бұрын
I think it comes down to how a group describes itself, not how others identify them. Ukraine decided to not be The Ukraine. The peoples decide what they're called. What Americans are called in other languages doesn't matter much. Japanese might say amerika-jin while Koreans would say mikuk-in. But in English it would be rude to call me anything other than what I choose to be called.
@beasley1232
@beasley1232 Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU I don't care what language you speak if you are in someone else's country speaking their language they should refer to the people of that country in their native language period
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
So, are you saying people from the Continent of America 🌎 can't call themselves Americans since they're from the Continent of America 🌎?
@dfunited1
@dfunited1 Жыл бұрын
@@CaptainAmerica001 people can call themselves whatever they want. It only gets confusing if you choose a name that someone popular already uses. I might ask friends and family to call me Keanu Reeves, but somebody quite famous already uses that name and it could become confusing.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
@@dfunited1 Cool, so an American is from the Continent of America 🌎!👍
@cablefeed3738
@cablefeed3738 Жыл бұрын
@@CaptainAmerica001 There is no continent of america there is North America in South America they are 2 separate continents that are not related to one another.
@CarolinaMatamorosF
@CarolinaMatamorosF Жыл бұрын
Colombian here, definetly the most used demonim is "Estadounidense" followed by "Gringo" and then perhaps "Americano" but yes we see it as an appropiaton of a continental identity.
@shadow9495
@shadow9495 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact before Colombia became independent it was a debate in US congress to change the name of the usa to Colombia. but then Colombia got its independence and so the debate ended
@QuantumOfSilence
@QuantumOfSilence Жыл бұрын
I wanna press you on this: Why do you think there's a shared continental identity between people from the northern islands of Canada, through Mexico, down to Tierra del Fuego? Don't you think that's far too broad?
@CarolinaMatamorosF
@CarolinaMatamorosF Жыл бұрын
@@QuantumOfSilence and European, African or Asian aren't? Continental identities are very broad by definition, but they are there.
@daviddorsett7550
@daviddorsett7550 Жыл бұрын
@@CarolinaMatamorosF Would you be offended if I called you a South American?
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
@@daviddorsett7550 No need for cardinal points to tell you where Colombia is in America. Do you?
@JeremyWS
@JeremyWS Жыл бұрын
Yankee is usually considered derogatory and that's why it isn't very popular. Out of all your suggestions, the only one I really liked was: fredonian. This is because the USA is big on our freedoms. Maybe it should catch on.
@solarsailor1534
@solarsailor1534 Жыл бұрын
The other problem with the term “Yankee” is that it’s use is highly regional within the United States. To paraphrase an old quote… “To the world, a Yankee is someone from America. To an American, a Yankee is someone from the north. To someone from the north, a Yankee is someone from the northeast. To someone from the northeast, a Yankee is someone from New England. To someone from New England, a Yankee is someone from Vermont. And to someone from Vermont, a Yankee is someone who eats pie for breakfast.”
@moonpie1971
@moonpie1971 Жыл бұрын
@@solarsailor1534 I was never called a Yankee until I moved to the Hell That Is Texas.
@shawnv123
@shawnv123 Жыл бұрын
@@moonpie1971 lmaooo
@eliscanfield3913
@eliscanfield3913 Жыл бұрын
@@solarsailor1534 I like pie for breakfast, but despite being a Connecticuter, I don't mind Yankee
@yknoturbss-oon594
@yknoturbss-oon594 Жыл бұрын
If you ask someone from Central America, South America, Mexico, some European countries, Africa and Asian, they'll tell you that the US is not to much about freedom (((
@svipul2582
@svipul2582 Жыл бұрын
We, Brazilians use the term "Estadunidense" to refer to people from the USA. It's very commom!
@stes_
@stes_ Жыл бұрын
Yeah but that just wont work in English grammatically or as a pleasant way to say it
@Omouja
@Omouja Жыл бұрын
@@stes_ Statian sounds nice to me
@raptorstudio9731
@raptorstudio9731 Жыл бұрын
@@Omouja I think you might need help
@tillysaway
@tillysaway Жыл бұрын
no tf it ain't, literally everyone in brazil uses americano, if you pull a "estadunidense" you instantly give away your political position
@tillysaway
@tillysaway Жыл бұрын
the most used word in brazil is by far americano
@zephodb
@zephodb Жыл бұрын
As far as calling Americans 'Yankees', there are actually large swaths of the country that'll get angry at you... Just like calling a Scotsman 'British'.
@MuriKakari
@MuriKakari Жыл бұрын
It's actually more akin to calling a Scotsman English. Southerners have been known to say Yankee about North Easterners in approximately the same contexts as an angry Scotsman saying Sassenach.
@zephodb
@zephodb Жыл бұрын
@@MuriKakari I'm talking as a West-Coast USA person who has been SCREAMED at by a Scotsman for calling her a Brit IRL, took her about a minute to look like she didn't want to attack me afterward. >.>
@MuriKakari
@MuriKakari Жыл бұрын
@@zephodb Fair. I've only seen them get that angry about English.
@UXB1000
@UXB1000 Жыл бұрын
An intriguing video as always Name Explain. Although, I'd like to try and expand on a point that you *surprisingly* *only* *briefly* touched, since most comments here are from the perspective of *Romance language* speakers. *Not all non-English languages have the same translation for the United States of America* (except for the aforementioned Romance languages). Thus there is not a single solution that fits all. I don't know how would you translate the "United States of America" in languages such as Japanese or Arabic, but I presume that they don't have an equivalent of United Statesian/Estadounidense/Estadunidense in their language. Or that they do, but it's rarely, if ever, used by their speakers for one reason or another. Thus calling them, say, "Amerika-jin" or "Amrikki" is easier. Take Malay and Indonesian for example - our translation for the United States of America is Amerika Syarikat/Serikat (due to historical reasons), which literally means something like "American Union/Cooperation/Company" instead of a more correct term like "Negeri-negeri Bersatu Amerika" or "Kesatuan Negeri-negeri Amerika". And we call the people "Orang Amerika" - Americans. Thus, if you take away the "Amerika" part of the name, we are left with Syarikat/Serikat, which means "Union/Cooperation/Company". Thus we would be calling them "Orang Syarikat/Serikat", which is equivalent to calling them Unioners/Cooperationers/Companiers. It just sounds so awkward and does not pronounce easily. Sure, a term can be coined and it may work, but it'll take a very, very long time. We could just take the easy way and call them Orang Barat (Westerners) or Orang Puteh or Bule (White People) like most of us are doing now, but that'll open up another can of worms I presume.
@azarishiba2559
@azarishiba2559 11 ай бұрын
Actually Japanese do have an alternative for Amerika-jin: it's Beikoku-jin. Beikoku is the abbreviature of "Amerika Gasshuukoku" ("United States of America"). The "koku" comes evidently from "Gasshuukoku", while the "Bei" is the alternative reading for the kanji that means "rice", which happens to have also the reading "me" in "Amerika". This is because you can actually write "Amerika" in kanji, not only with katakana. As a Costa Rican, when I'm speaking in Japanese, I always use "Beikoku" and "Beikoku-jin" to refer to USA and their people respectively. If a Japanese happen to ask me why I use that actually not so used word, I explain why I prefer it, without trying to start a fight, of course.
@Kimero1981
@Kimero1981 Жыл бұрын
In México is usually Estadounidense, but is even more frequent to just say Gringo.
@GeneralBulldog54
@GeneralBulldog54 Жыл бұрын
I’ve always wondered what does gringo translate to (or what word is the closest approximation) in English?
@andresdominguez8629
@andresdominguez8629 Жыл бұрын
@@GeneralBulldog54 There is no exact translation. I had heard that it comes from the word "griego" (Greek), and people used it to describe someone who spoke a foreign language because they thought they spoke Greek. In Mexico, most people use it as a synonym for "estadounidense", although there are some people who also use it to refer to Canadians.
@SpartanChief2277
@SpartanChief2277 Жыл бұрын
@@GeneralBulldog54 the origin story i grew up with was that during the battle of the alamo, mexican soldiers would sneak up and hear texans singing "where the *green grass grows*" and it came from ther. Gringo usually means WASP americans, sometimes black americans are called that too, but mostly to white americans
@josegiovanigonzalezmata5570
@josegiovanigonzalezmata5570 Жыл бұрын
@@GeneralBulldog54 I understand that "Gringo" was used when referring to the people of the USA in an annoying tone, but in itself it never meant an insult to the people of the USA. Currently, calling people from the US "Gringo" is more of an informal tone of calling them. But when you speak formally, we call them "Estadounidense."
@otaviomio2887
@otaviomio2887 Жыл бұрын
I'm Brazilian and honestly I've heard this debate since I was a kid and I find it very cringy. Yes, America is the name of the continent and also the name of the country. I know about the "cultural" issue, but I think worrying about this is at least somewhat childish. Here in Brazil we have states and cities sharing names and that's not a big issue; while there are still different words for someone born in the city of São Paulo (paulistano) and the state of São Paulo (paulista), most of the time people will know what place you're talking about just from the context. I won't mind if a new official name for someone born in the US is crafted, but, if it's to be made from scratch, let's make something which at least resembles American (such as paulista/paulistano) or at least something completely original (for example: someone born in the city of Rio is carioca, someone born in the state of Rio is fluminense; none of these words resemble the Portuguese word Rio, which means river). Statesian is just horrible. Kingdomish too. Some people in Brazil say "estadunidense" instead of "americano" and it sounds cocky and stupid. Either a nicer name is created or we stick to "American" and trust the context until a new name starts to occur naturally. That's not that big of an issue.
@xandercruz900
@xandercruz900 Жыл бұрын
We're fine as we are. These people can seriously get over themselves.
@user-id4oi3hl7b
@user-id4oi3hl7b Жыл бұрын
There is no American Continent. North and South America are separate just like Asia and Europe are separate
@otaviomio2887
@otaviomio2887 Жыл бұрын
@@user-id4oi3hl7b this is somewhat debatable, but yes, generally when someone here wishes to refer to themselves as from a certain continent, they go with South American, not just American. In fact, this "American pride" thing is highlighted only when this "Americans shouldn't be called Americans" "debate" comes up.
@NovaSaber
@NovaSaber Жыл бұрын
@@user-id4oi3hl7b More like how Eurasia and Africa are separate. They are literally MORE separate than Europe is from Asia, where neither geography nor geology supports the distinction.
@minutemansam1214
@minutemansam1214 Жыл бұрын
@@user-id4oi3hl7b Europe is not a continent, it's Eurasia.
@6t76t
@6t76t Жыл бұрын
Gonna be hard to change that, especially since many people also add ethnicity demonym next to American, in regards to their identity, such as Japanese American, Polish American, and Mexican American.
@SMorales851
@SMorales851 Жыл бұрын
Chilean here! In my experience, the most common demonyms for the USA are "estadounidense" and "gringo", for formal and informal contexts, respectively. Though gringo is also valid for any (non spanish) western european, as well as australians. In that sense, it is really a synonym for "white" or "colonizer", and may be used in a derogatory way. "North-american" is also used, often to prevent repeating "estadounidense" over and over (e.g. in the news). "American" is also used, but it often leads to misunderstandings and I personally only use it when I'm talking about the continent. Using it as a demonym for the US may also have a slight political undertone, as it is mostly used in that way by "gringos" and right-wingers, and evokes the phrase "South America is the backyard of the US" and its ties to imperialism.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
America is not a country or a nation. Since it's neither of those, 'American' is not a nationality, a citizenship or a term exclusively for/from the USA 🇺🇲. Furthermore, an American is from the Continent of America 🌎👍 'Estadounidense' is a direct & accurate translation of the official citizenship of the United States of America 🇺🇲. Estado(State)Unido(United)Ense(Inhabitant, resident, citizen of the region or area) Estadounidense = U.S. Citizen Officially 👍
@Dora-xi5ob
@Dora-xi5ob 10 ай бұрын
"Gringo" is a racial slur. How about we start calling people from Latin American countries "B3aners” or “w3tbacks”
@Dora-xi5ob
@Dora-xi5ob 10 ай бұрын
So is “colonizer”. The Europeans who colonized the Americas were colonizers, not white people today.
@lodibujado6742
@lodibujado6742 6 ай бұрын
​@@Dora-xi5obBut you burger gobbler gringos already do so. Why play victim now?.
@CasualLifeExperiencer
@CasualLifeExperiencer Жыл бұрын
In Italy there's also the term "statunitense ", although it's not often used colloquially, but it's the go-to demonim if you're a journalist, you write fiction or just want to talk more formally. As we speak casually, as it's been said in the video, we say americano / americana depending on grammatical gender. Fun fact, styles of coffee like Americano, cappuccino, espresso end with o because they refer to and agree in gender with "il Caffè ", that is masculine.
@SpecterDiego
@SpecterDiego Жыл бұрын
Dominican here (from the Spanish speaking country lol), we do use estadounidense a lot more than anything else if we're talking about formal speech, but in most cases anyone speaking English is called a gringo.
@GaldorasEithel
@GaldorasEithel Жыл бұрын
Toanswer that question ( 7:56 ), in hispanicamerica (all spanish speaker latinamerican countries) we do use "Estadounidense" in reference of a person from the US. Tho this is the correct word for us, the really common word for them is "Gringo" that may come from greek, for when (I don't if Spanish or Hispanicamerican) didn't know what language is someone spoken it's said that it's talking greek, griego in spanish (Griego -> Gringo)...I'm from Chile and I've never heard that in my life...in my case if I don't know what language is someone talking I say "gringo", not "griego"...(although what I really say is "ke weá", but...yeah...
@xXNitemareXx
@xXNitemareXx Жыл бұрын
I've heard all manner of names used to identify the people of the Americas and their respective regions. No one calls a Mexican from Mexico or a Brazilian from Brazil an "American", and not even because they are technically Americans from the Americas and that would be a proper use of the word anyways. Nope. We distinguish by the country over here. I suppose you could say, "I'm a US American" to make a distinction, but you could NEVER get me to call myself a "United Statestian," or a "United Statesmen". Sounds weird.
@carlosadiaz
@carlosadiaz Жыл бұрын
I'm from Honduras and we were taught in school that the land mass from Alaska to Argentina is known as America. These are the continents: America Europe Asia Africa Oceania Antarctica Now America is subdivided into three regions: North America Middle America (Central America and the Caribbean) South America
@everettatwater2939
@everettatwater2939 Жыл бұрын
You were tought wrong there are two continents south and north America
@Vrealita
@Vrealita Жыл бұрын
@@everettatwater2939 There are many ways to define continents. Look at Europe, which depends on a historical and cultural definition to be a continent apart from Asia, given that there are no different landmasses based on tectonic plates. The name "America", as a single continent, obviously precedes both logically and historically the subdivision into "North" and "South" (mostly based on the tectonic plates division of landmasses) , but also transcendes it, as in the terms "Native Americans", "Latin America" or "Organization of American States", which encompasses peoples, countries and States from both North and South Americas.
@user-id4oi3hl7b
@user-id4oi3hl7b Жыл бұрын
If you consider the Americas as one continent why don’t you consider Afroeurasia as one continent?
@Vrealita
@Vrealita Жыл бұрын
@@user-id4oi3hl7b On the contrary. The division into "North" and "South" America is based mostly on tectonic plates landmasses (althought not 100% accurate, i.e. Caribbean plate, etc), while considering them a single continent is mostly a Historical approach (as in New World). In the same way, we differentiate Europe from Asia from a Historical/cultural perspective. If based on lamdmasses and tectonics, we should consider most (of not all) of Eurasia a a single continent. It is all in the definitions.
@carlosadiaz
@carlosadiaz Жыл бұрын
@@user-id4oi3hl7b The difference between Europe and Asia is a matter culture and geography. The Ural Mountains separate Europe and Asia while America is one uninterrupted land mass.
@miguelcarrillo4603
@miguelcarrillo4603 Жыл бұрын
8:02 , From Perú here, I feel like "Estadounidense" is the most used, because we're also Americans, Latinamericans specifically (which, by the way, I think is a term that some spanish people might have a problem with maybe?)
@chippy7208
@chippy7208 Жыл бұрын
if you say it makes sense to call people from North America "northern/north Americans" and people from South America "southern/south Americans", you have a point, however in the US, those terms are also used for those living in the northern and southern ends of the country, so it's hard to make that point.
@rivasahp89
@rivasahp89 Жыл бұрын
I'm from Costa Rica, we call the people from the US estadounidense and the country Estados Unidos. Americano for us, means someone from the American continent.
@modmaker7617
@modmaker7617 Жыл бұрын
In Polish, every single country has 2 demonyms. 1 an adjective for things from the country using the -ski (masculine)/-ska (feminine)/-skie (neuter) suffix (the gender depends of the gender of the noun following) which is the only thing in Polish that 100% regular and a noun for the people of the country which there's lots of suffixes used.
@Ace-theCat
@Ace-theCat Жыл бұрын
The reason the term American stuck is cuz it was used before the US was even a thing. Back in the old colonial times we would have been called "British American" and after the revolution, obviously, the British part was dropped and people just kept using American. And there is still the issue that the US isn't the only country divided into states just like how Britannia isn't the only one with a Kingdom. Really the issue is there's no unique word to use for the US both within and outside the country that doesn't feel clunky or confusing to us, like for example Washingtonian could be confused with people from the state of Washington. at least Britain is the only place with the British name. If anything i think all we need is a simple modifier or alteration of American so the shift isn't so jarring and potentially confusing, it could be as simple as Americonian or something. the more familiar it is the less pushback there would be, large sudden language shift can be confusing and jarring and would upset anyone of any country
@Ace-theCat
@Ace-theCat Жыл бұрын
But the big issue is we would need to push against over 400 years of this term being used for the people living in what used to be the British American Colonies. That's an extremely uphill battle as there's so many documents and stories and media that refer to us as American it would take a very long time for it to fall out of use especially with those in the states who feel a very very very strong connection to the word American so i doubt any change will happen unless there is a miracle
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
Spanish America precedes 'British America'. The region where Brasil is now was named America way before the USA🇺🇲 existed. In conclusion, regardless of what continental model anyone follows, it doesn't automatically make América a country & 'American' a term only for the U.S.A.🇺🇲!👍 América definitely is not a country or a nation. Therefore, 'American' isn't a nationality, a citizenship, or a term exclusively for the U.S.A.🇺🇲 Anyone who uses these terms as such is due to selfishness, ignorance, conceitedness, laziness, stubbornness, indoctrination, and/or arrogance! Furthermore, an American is from the Continent of América!👍 The United States of América/America (U.S.A.)🇺🇲 has a simple, basic, generic, & descriptive name that's easy to comprehend & not misinterpret in any way or language! The United States of América/America (U.S.A.)🇺🇲 simply means we are STATES, that are UNITED, on the Continent 'OF' AMÉRICA! Not América of the United States!!!😏 It's what our Founding Fathers & authors meant, and still means!👍 Greetings from the U.S.A.🇺🇲, an American from the Continent of América! English is my 1st language! AMÉRICA 🌎🌎🌎 🇲🇽🇧🇷🇨🇴🇦🇷🇨🇦🇵🇪🇻🇪🇨🇱🇪🇨🇬🇹🇧🇴🇭🇹🇨🇺🇩🇴🇭🇳🇵🇾🇸🇻🇳🇮🇺🇲🇨🇷🇵🇦🇺🇾🇯🇲🇹🇹🇬🇾🇸🇷🇧🇿🇧🇸🇧🇧🇱🇨🇬🇩🇻🇨🇦🇬🇩🇲🇰🇳 United States of AMÉRICA 🇺🇲 An American is from the Continent of América. We are ALL Americans!!! I approve this message.👍 Hopefully that'll help!👍
@Ace-theCat
@Ace-theCat Жыл бұрын
@@CaptainAmerica001 I brought up British America as why Americans still get called American as, unlike Brazil, we never got a unique Demonym to refer to ourselves and the general term "American" stuck. I do agree that it has problems though and it would take a lot of work and effort to change due to how long this demonym has been getting used. And yes American is not a legally recognized nationality, it's a demonym, the nationality would be United States of America. And I know what United States of America means the issue is the demonym American, used to refer to the colonial people on the Central North American territory colonized by the British, predates the United States by a good few 100 years. And being Generic is the problem, the name USA is way too generic, other countries have United States in their name but then have a unique name like Mexico, Venezuela, and Columbia. The best solution I can see is to make a more unique demonym with what we already have: US-American or Americonian. Hell I'm even fine with using State names as demonyms the only issue is it requires everyone else to know the names of every state in the US and also Georgia could cause confusion for some.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
@@Ace-theCat How about using our official nationality or citizenship instead of the demonym that belongs to the Continent of America? Don't we do that already for other countries?
@Ace-theCat
@Ace-theCat Жыл бұрын
@@CaptainAmerica001 No, we don't. How nationality is legally written is very different from how demonyms are used in conversation. Take Kiwi for example, it is a demonym but the legally recognized nationality is New Zealand, just the name of the country with no modification. While that is a good starting point it is the whole reason we're in this problem to begin with. most places that follow the name format "United _____ (of) ______" always ends up with the final term becoming their demonym like Mexico or historically Brazil, even the Emirates adopts the terminal word of their name as their demonym. The USA just has a really poorly thought out name. Also there is no Continent of America, there are called The Americas because there are two of them North America (From Greenland to Panama) and South America (From Venezuela to Chile) it is similar to how Europe and Asia exist on the same land mass but are separated into two distinct continents anyways, but we are still all American if we so choose to use the term.
@juancabezascaceres
@juancabezascaceres Жыл бұрын
Chilean here. I use 'estadounidense' in spanish and 'US american' in english.
@codex4102
@codex4102 Жыл бұрын
@Forgotten User Fair, but yeah a lot of people in South America say "estadounidense" and understand that as a North American.
@codex4102
@codex4102 Жыл бұрын
@Forgotten User im not saying its right, its just the usual term for that
@codex4102
@codex4102 Жыл бұрын
@Forgotten User yeah why not, north americans fit right in english, but if sometimes you are in a spanish country or talking in a spanish language for reasons xD, it gonna take more than you comment to change that becuase its the right term in that language , but hey i gonna do it, because you want be call like that, and im talking in english too, so here you got my north american fellow
@codex4102
@codex4102 Жыл бұрын
@Forgotten User yep, USA is a country on North America
@codex4102
@codex4102 Жыл бұрын
@Forgotten User but just throwing ideas here, if we combined the two maybe... we can call it... hear me out... Super america or Mega america or America plus, maybe thats taken (?) xD names are difficult xD
@charliebrmg
@charliebrmg 11 ай бұрын
In Spain, we commonly use “Estadounidense” (and some people also use “Norteamericano/a”) to refer to US Nationals, and “Americano/a” to refer to any person from any country of the Americas. Also, we generally consider North America and South America as a single continent (conveniently named “América”)
@ej_22
@ej_22 11 ай бұрын
It was Spain who called British Americans or Americans when they u.s was still a colony
@axxel_o
@axxel_o 7 ай бұрын
Total !!! Bueno en venezuela es igual , nosotros sabemos q el contienente es America, asi como tu al ser español del continente europeo ( series europeo ) yo seria americana , el problemq es qie los gringos , como que no entienden la logica y solo agarran lo qie le.dijeron a los 5 años
@axxel_o
@axxel_o 7 ай бұрын
Entonces uno les intenta exlicar con logica y siguen y siguen hasta que te aburres y los dejas en su terquedad
@charliebrmg
@charliebrmg 7 ай бұрын
@@axxel_o Lo que estás explicando (que es mayoritariamente cierto, por desgracia), es una ideología que el gobierno de Estados Unidos trató de imponer en todo el continente americano, para forzar la emancipación de territorios coloniales europeos, y ver si podían colonizarlos EEUU. Se llamó la “doctrina Monroe” (por el entonces presidente de EEUU), y vio cómo Cuba, Puerto Rico y la zona del Canal de Panamá se convirtieron en territorios vinculados a EEUU. Es como si decidieran apropiarse de todo un continente, sólo porque llevan el nombre del continente en el de su país. Por eso creo que se hacen llamar “americanos”, y como el nivel de cultura general en dicho país está, de media, por debajo de la media europea, no hay forma de convencerles de lo contrario a lo que ellos creen. Es mejor no perder el tiempo con esas cosas. Debo, no obstante, reconocer que hay casos concretos de estadounidenses que son bastante cultos en el aspecto. Es probable que, si el autor de este vídeo tuviese el mismo nivel de cultura general que la mayoría de los estadounidenses, ni se hubiera planteado dicha cuestión. América es un continente único; Venezuela es un país maravilloso, y su gente es excepcional. Saludos desde España.
@FoggyD
@FoggyD Жыл бұрын
The United Republic of Tanzania must feel left out here. In Year 7 French we were always taught to say《 je suis anglais 》or《 je suis gallois 》so I didn't hear the word 'britannique' until Year 10 when we watched a video in class about a guy from... you guessed it, Northern Ireland! My Dad is technically a "U.S. Ian" ever since he got naturalized citizenship. In German you sometimes see "US-Amerikaner" and "US-amerikanisch" in order to make it absolutely clear they're not referring to some other America, but the scope for confusion is narrower than in say, Mexico or Brazil.
@sparky6086
@sparky6086 Жыл бұрын
When I visited Argentina 25 years ago, when they asked me, where I was from, if I replied, "America", they would politely say, "I'm from America too. What part are you from?". So I learned to reply, "The United States" or "North America". North America seemed to be specific enough for them.
@barcobasurero6289
@barcobasurero6289 Жыл бұрын
based argentinian greetings from argentina
@grugnotice7746
@grugnotice7746 Жыл бұрын
When them say, "Me from America too!" Grug say "Then why you come to this commie shithole?"
@AsukaLangleyS02
@AsukaLangleyS02 Жыл бұрын
Tell them to blow it out their ass, it's a cope from an inferior part of the Americas.
@pjschmid2251
@pjschmid2251 Жыл бұрын
I say I am from the US but my demonym is still American. All those other words just sound plain old weird.
@everettatwater2939
@everettatwater2939 Жыл бұрын
should have replied. no, I'm an American and you're a south American
@thepurplephoenix8893
@thepurplephoenix8893 Жыл бұрын
I’m from The United States of America 🇺🇸. @NameExplain I politely disagree with you when you say that Americans (USA) shouldn’t be called Americans. People from North America are North Americans not just Americans. The people from South America are South Americans not just Americans. The term Yankee/ Yank/Yanks only referrers to Americans who live in the states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware.
@Epsilon-5
@Epsilon-5 Жыл бұрын
Technically they shouldn’t even be called American since current day Americans are just British people while the native Americans are the ones who should be referred to as such
@pokegod99
@pokegod99 Жыл бұрын
@@Epsilon-5 Don't go down that rabbit hole if we go all the way back were all Africans.
@BuzzingMeat
@BuzzingMeat Жыл бұрын
@@pokegod99 yep, where do those people draw the line when they bring up that point. Do they also consider Ukraine as part of Russia since it used to be Russia territory. Do they consider parts of Russia as parts of China since it used to be China territory. That’s the problem with those people, they cherry pick which land belongs to who based off who they like and dislike.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
I am also from the United States 🇺🇲 👉OF👈 America 🌎. There's nothing wrong with calling us Americans. An American is from the Continent of America. The issue arises when folks say we're the only ones or it's a citizenship/nationality.
@buddermonger2000
@buddermonger2000 Жыл бұрын
Tbh this problem just happens to be about the fact that the Americans got to name themselves and were the only ones to choose the name after the general continent. However at this point it's so entrenched that even foreigners know it as "America" and it gets displayed that way on at least a few maps. Most states actually do have longer names (the Russian federation off the top of my head) and then get shortened to whatever is the prime word. Thus "America" is in use all around the world except in some parts of Latin America who feel a bit salty and Italy (possibly due to lingual proximity).
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
Regardless of what continental model anyone follows, it doesn't automatically make América a country & 'American' a term only for the U.S.A.🇺🇲!👍 América definitely is not a country or a nation. Therefore, 'American' isn't a nationality, a citizenship, or a term exclusively for the U.S.A.🇺🇲 Anyone who uses these terms as such is due to selfishness, ignorance, conceitedness, laziness, stubbornness, indoctrination, and/or arrogance! Furthermore, an American is from the Continent of América!👍 The United States of América/America (U.S.A.)🇺🇲 has a simple, basic, generic, & descriptive name that's easy to comprehend & not misinterpret in any way or language! The United States of América/America (U.S.A.)🇺🇲 simply means we are STATES, that are UNITED, on the Continent 'OF' AMÉRICA! Not América of the United States!!!😏 It's what our Founding Fathers & authors meant, and still means!👍 Greetings from the U.S.A.🇺🇲, an American from the Continent of América! English is my 1st language! AMÉRICA 🌎🌎🌎 🇲🇽🇧🇷🇨🇴🇦🇷🇨🇦🇵🇪🇻🇪🇨🇱🇪🇨🇬🇹🇧🇴🇭🇹🇨🇺🇩🇴🇭🇳🇵🇾🇸🇻🇳🇮🇺🇲🇨🇷🇵🇦🇺🇾🇯🇲🇹🇹🇬🇾🇸🇷🇧🇿🇧🇸🇧🇧🇱🇨🇬🇩🇻🇨🇦🇬🇩🇲🇰🇳 United States of AMÉRICA 🇺🇲 An American is from the Continent of América. We are ALL Americans!!! I approve this message.👍 Hopefully that'll help!👍
@ErikPT
@ErikPT Жыл бұрын
@@CaptainAmerica001 Perhaps but, unless other nations have the same influence no son Americanos. They have their own estados sus pais. It's ridiculous to call Colombians Americans, they are very patriotic and won't accept that. Mexico is a wild card, the official name is EUM or Mexico. But... again not enough clout. Also, the patriotic symbolism is Mexico has her own culture. It's wayyyyyyy too late to claim America. She's here since 1776.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
@@ErikPT 😁 'America', in the official name of the United States of America 🇺🇲, has represented a continent for the past 246yrs, even 269yrs before the USA 🇺🇲 existed. The Continent of America🌎 was named 515yrs ago.
@Serch_YB27
@Serch_YB27 Жыл бұрын
As a mexican I can confirm that "Estadounidense" is the correct and common demonyn used in spanish, but the most common colloquial one we use (at least in México) is "Gringo". The legend I've heard of how that demonyn originated states that the term comes from the 1848's US invation of Mexico where the US Army had green uniforms so people shouted at them "Greens go!" so that they went away from our country and then it evolved to "Gringo"
@Serch_YB27
@Serch_YB27 Жыл бұрын
Here in Mexico and in other Latin American countries we are taught in school that there are 5 continenets: America, Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania. So we mostly don't like US-citizens being refered as "American" because we all consider ourselves from the continent.
@Vrealita
@Vrealita Жыл бұрын
@Forgotten User Mexico is officialy called "United Mexican States", which is no the same.
@AsukaLangleyS02
@AsukaLangleyS02 Жыл бұрын
LOL taking Spanish seriously
@Serch_YB27
@Serch_YB27 Жыл бұрын
@Forgotten User I know, but in spanish no one calls MExico that way and USA in spanish is literlly "Estados Unidos". If you say "América" in an spanish speaking country most likely they'll think you are talking about the continent.
@everettatwater2939
@everettatwater2939 Жыл бұрын
You're a north American not an American
@RobertoVZucco
@RobertoVZucco Жыл бұрын
Mexican here. The term estadounidense/norteamericano is only used in a formal way or when comunicating in a written form. Un any other scenario the common demonym is "gringo/gringa" (male/female). Fun fact: a "gringa" is also the name of a popular street food here in México.
@Dora-xi5ob
@Dora-xi5ob 10 ай бұрын
"Gringo" is a racial slur. How about we start calling people from Latin American countries "B3aners” or “w3tbacks”
@mysteriousDSF
@mysteriousDSF Жыл бұрын
In London it gets quite tricky and in many cases it's simpler to go the extra mile explaining a person's background in detail. If someone is black but born and raised in rural England, are they English? Yes and no, culturally yes but ethnically no. And also where does being a British start? I'm a Hungarian living here for four years, am I British? When did or will I become one? I can pronounce bottle of water the British way, does that count?
@Omouja
@Omouja Жыл бұрын
Well, it's not that difficult. British is everyone that borns in the British isles, so technically you will never be British, and that black person will be 100% British, even if he don't speak English and you do.
@mysteriousDSF
@mysteriousDSF Жыл бұрын
@@Omouja I'm going to get citizenship in two years so in some sense I will be British.
@melodyclark1944
@melodyclark1944 Жыл бұрын
If someone is born and raised in the UK I wouldn't be surprised if they identify as British and if you have citizenship you're British even if people have a problem with that. Even if you never become a citizen if you're not planning on leaving you can identify as British.
@Omouja
@Omouja Жыл бұрын
@@mysteriousDSF oh, yeah true. The citizenship
@wafflehidraulico193
@wafflehidraulico193 Жыл бұрын
in latam (mainly in mexico), we often use the word "gringo", despite nobody knowing exactly where it came from
@whosaidthat84
@whosaidthat84 Жыл бұрын
But isn't gringo just for white americans? Do you call black Americans and Latin Americans gringos too?
@David_Palacios
@David_Palacios Жыл бұрын
@@whosaidthat84yeah, I don’t know where the idea of “gringo” being used only for white people or even as a racial slur came from, it may be because depending on context it can have a derogatory meaning, which may make some people associate it with words like the n-word, yellow, or whitey, which are used exclusively to describe someone for their race, and not their nationality.
@TheFi0r3
@TheFi0r3 Жыл бұрын
The Mexican-American War.
@Emperor_Oshron
@Emperor_Oshron Жыл бұрын
well, people from the Netherlands _are_ also called "Netherlanders" in addition to "Dutch" :P
@modmaker7617
@modmaker7617 Жыл бұрын
Yeah but nobody calls them that
@korelamerikano
@korelamerikano Жыл бұрын
Holland??
@modmaker7617
@modmaker7617 Жыл бұрын
@@korelamerikano Holland is actually 2 provinces of the Netherlands.
@korelamerikano
@korelamerikano Жыл бұрын
@@modmaker7617 I know, but their football national went all the way with Holland, so it stuck in our heads for so many time, that this whole country wan Holland
@modmaker7617
@modmaker7617 Жыл бұрын
@@korelamerikano It looks like now the national football team is called the Netherlands not Holland. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netherlands_national_football_team
@Omouja
@Omouja Жыл бұрын
I'm Brazilian and I always say estadunidense, and I'm noticing that this term is getting more and more common, principally among the youngs. In English I use US American to specify someone from the USA, and I think that the Statian term is kinda nice.
@fojr0324
@fojr0324 Жыл бұрын
Oooo Statian… this US American approves! 👍
@alanetchetto8908
@alanetchetto8908 Жыл бұрын
I love calling them statians, more than anything because a lot of them get mad and say "we are american, call us american and cope" lol.
@fojr0324
@fojr0324 Жыл бұрын
@@alanetchetto8908 Sounds about right. There are way too many fragile, toxic egos here. There are way more serious issues in the world that they could channel that “passion” towards. Please take my word for it, not all of us are like that. 🤣
@cyberherbalist
@cyberherbalist Жыл бұрын
I'm an American living in the UK, and it's common for the Brits (another demonym under disputation) to refer to the USA as "the States". So "Statesian" makes some sense. But in Brazilian wouldn't it be more like "Statesiano"?
@jbach2002
@jbach2002 Жыл бұрын
I understand your perspective, but please don’t call me Statian, that makes me cringe. We also aren’t the only country of states
@georgelewis1727
@georgelewis1727 11 ай бұрын
I have apprciated FLW's "Usonian" (as you mentioned - but I pronounce it all together "you-SEW-knee-an"). He used the term American to refer to Native American people and culture. Part of the issue is that prior to the Civil War - citizens of the United States referred to themselves by their State of origin. We had New Yorkers, Georgians, Virginians etc.. An exception would be if you came from one of the 6 New England states -- you might call yourself a "Yankee". (This term too is used differently relative to to where you live - but that is a whole other ball of wax which, no doubt, you have made a video on). Before the Civil War the term American was used -- but not as much. The War changed people's idea of themselves.
@sillygoose9791
@sillygoose9791 Жыл бұрын
On another note, what is to be said for the names of nationalities not tied to the suffix rule? Like, there's the term polish people, but you can also use the term Pole or Polack to refer to someone of that heritage. Also, I've never heard Kazhakstani used in phrase, but I have heard Kazhak.
@AgentClaudius
@AgentClaudius Жыл бұрын
Puertorican here, for pretty much my entire life living in the island ive seen that almost everyone here refers to americans as either "Americano" or just good ol' "Gringo". Norte Americano is usually used to only refer to Canada & USA, though Estadounidense is also widely used, I'd say Americano or Gringo is a lot more commonly used.
@prouddegenerates9056
@prouddegenerates9056 Жыл бұрын
I’d prefer Virginian or Appalachian honestly, but I’m indeed American. Claiming I’m form the US isn’t very descriptive either, when your also such and someone doesn’t need to think hard to find a difference between the average red neck and a Puertorican.
@josegiovanigonzalezmata5570
@josegiovanigonzalezmata5570 Жыл бұрын
Well, too bad that only North American refers to the USA and Canada when Mexico also belongs within North America... Greenland is also North American but due to the fact that they are not completely an independent country, it could be said that they continue to consider themselves "Europeans" for the Kingdom of Denmark, but the day they become completely independent from Denmark, will the USA consider Greenland as North American?
@daviddorsett7550
@daviddorsett7550 Жыл бұрын
As citizens of the United States of America, Puerto Ricans can also be rightly called Americans.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
@@daviddorsett7550 No, 'American' is not a citizenship. An American is from the Continent of America. Puerto Rico is not on the Continent of America. Puerto Rico is in the Caribbean & is on the Caribbean Plate. Tectonic plates are not continents.
@justoad
@justoad Жыл бұрын
​@@CaptainAmerica001What? Puerto Rico is definitely in the continent of America. The Caribbean Plate is not a continent... it's just a tectonic plate.
@BonaparteBardithion
@BonaparteBardithion Жыл бұрын
10:00 Even using the state demonym instead of national poses some redundancies. Since DC is its own territory there are two different Washingtonians. Georgia has a similar issue with the country of the same name.
@-AirKat-
@-AirKat- Жыл бұрын
Why don’t we just call people from DC Colombians… …oh
@brunodosreis
@brunodosreis 10 ай бұрын
Dutch people actually do call themselves “Nederlanders” it’s just in foreign languages that they’re called “dutch”, or “holandais”.
@burdizdawurd1516Official
@burdizdawurd1516Official Жыл бұрын
Valid argument. I think American is a fitting term for two reasons: size and influence. And for the record I live in the U.S. Europe is about the size of the U.S., give or take, eh? One denonym fits for a region of that size with subdivisions as appropriate (states or countries as appropriate). Because the U.S. is so different from other coubtries on North and South America, rarely does anybody refer to the people of the continent(s) collectively in common usage. There's just no need. But Europe is composed of (and this is from my perspective as an American) a bunch of socalist states that share a lot in common. European and American denote the same sort of grouping of things under a similar heading, performing a similar function. And also worth considering, not to denounce the contributions of other countries in the Americas (notice I'm not calling them American but using a prepositional phrase instead), the U.S. is rhe #1 country (obvious satire) with the biggest economy and greatest political influence of all the countries on our continent. At least that's how we are portrayed by ourselves (sorry Canada).
@theskull1030
@theskull1030 Жыл бұрын
7:57 Mexican here and no, "estadounidense" IS by far the most used.
@tedgovostis7351
@tedgovostis7351 Жыл бұрын
Or people living in the Americas can be called North American or South Anerican, based on the continent they are from.Also, Mexico's full name is Estados Unidos Mexicanos. (United Mexican States) and at one time Colombia was Estados Unidos de Colobia. So the USA is not the only country with United States in its name.
@wifi961
@wifi961 Жыл бұрын
Yeah Europeans don’t really know many things or culture from this continent.
@sergiojose2000
@sergiojose2000 Жыл бұрын
Don't be ridiculous, in Spanish America is one continent, in English there are two, plus Mexico is a very personal adjective, no one on the continent calls themselves that. South America, Central America, North America, The Americas, Latin America, Anglo America, Franco-America. All those names have something in common and it is the word america.
@tedgovostis7351
@tedgovostis7351 Жыл бұрын
@@sergiojose2000 Absolutely. In Spanish it is viewed as one continent. This is a discussion about how Americans refer to themselves in English. When I am speaking Spanish, I will follow Spanish conventions. It's pretty ethnocentric to demand almost every other language on the planet stops calling Americans American (or some variation there of) just because your language uses it as a catch all for anyone living in any of The Americas.
@josephabellojr
@josephabellojr Жыл бұрын
In Colombia people from the US are called gringos casually, and Estadounidenses formally. Americanos is not really used that much.
@brunovb2650
@brunovb2650 Жыл бұрын
American Alligator - Only exists in the U.S. American Rhea - Exists in South America It's so confusing!
@errapel5117
@errapel5117 Жыл бұрын
I think here in Mexico most of the time we refer to USA people as “estado unidense” (at least here at México city), but a funny exception for me it’s when I refer to USA products such as cars or the classic “café americano” that I can’t help using that demonym.
@sergiojose2000
@sergiojose2000 Жыл бұрын
X2 Como ropa americana.
@markbollinger1343
@markbollinger1343 Жыл бұрын
I think a big issue is us Americans don't relate ourselves to a continent, but a country. Personally, I find it odd to relate yourselves as being from a continent and not a country. Even for Europe, there may be some things many or all European countries share but I wouldn't think of any person/group as "being European" (if I didn't know their country/accent but knew it was from Europe I might then). Culturally Central and South America do share a lot of culture being of Portuguese/ Spanish descent and the native cultures were mixed in which was a practice of those Empires but under the British. The US and Canada share a nearly identical culture, which annoys many Canadians because they lose their identity and are assumed to be Americans. Because there is only one country on the continent we have so much in common with and they don't call themselves Americans it's just not something we think about-we are also a continent-sized country. Furthermore, other demonyms just seem awkward and weird in English. I should add I find it a bit insulting for other people outside my country to tell me what I can and cannot call myself, us being so powerful and influential doesn't give others the right to tell us what to do just like my country shouldn't do to others. If other languages/people have other terms and simply use those it's fine, but to demand American English needs to change is not ok.
@SuicV
@SuicV Жыл бұрын
I can't speak for everyone, but I don't think there's any problem with people from the US calling themselves "americans". What I would argue some people have an issue with is when they don't recognize that the term can also apply, in a different context, to people from the entire continent. And that's probably the primary reason that people from Latin America have other terms for USA citizens: trying to avoid confusion, not so much that we find that use of "american" blasfemous or something. For context, I'm from Brazil
@markbollinger1343
@markbollinger1343 Жыл бұрын
@@SuicV sure I get that but it often comes across here in the US as “bad dumb white peoples are racist for using the term American”. Which is why people get resentful.
@PhilipePXF
@PhilipePXF Жыл бұрын
@@markbollinger1343 I'm also Brazilian, and I wouldn't say that people see Americans as "Bad, Racist,Dumb White Americans" just for using the term American as a denomyn for themselves, but when we see Americans not acknowledging that everyone else on the Americas are also Americans, we can see them as egotistical, self-centered Narcissistic egomaniacs", tô put it lightly.... specially because people are afraid of being culturally consumed by American cultural imperialism across the continent
@nutsackmania
@nutsackmania Жыл бұрын
This comment is awesome. *LOIKE OIM IN AWWWEEE M8*
@omargerardolopez3294
@omargerardolopez3294 Жыл бұрын
@@markbollinger1343 Nah, I'm more resentful for other things the US did and does, the demonym thing is just the easiest to talk about and correct
@jalenjasso306
@jalenjasso306 Жыл бұрын
When I was younger I asked this same question and no one can answer me. They said it just is. Thank you for this.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
Regardless of what continental model anyone follows, it doesn't automatically make América a country & 'American' a term only for the U.S.A.🇺🇲!👍 América definitely is not a country or a nation. Therefore, 'American' isn't a nationality, a citizenship, or a term exclusively for the U.S.A.🇺🇲 Anyone who uses these terms as such is due to selfishness, ignorance, conceitedness, laziness, stubbornness, indoctrination, and/or arrogance! Furthermore, an American is from the Continent of América!👍 The United States of América/America (U.S.A.)🇺🇲 has a simple, basic, generic, & descriptive name that's easy to comprehend & not misinterpret in any way or language! The United States of América/America (U.S.A.)🇺🇲 simply means we are STATES, that are UNITED, on the Continent 'OF' AMÉRICA! Not América of the United States!!!😏 It's what our Founding Fathers & authors meant, and still means!👍 Greetings from the U.S.A.🇺🇲, an American from the Continent of América! English is my 1st language! AMÉRICA 🌎🌎🌎 🇲🇽🇧🇷🇨🇴🇦🇷🇨🇦🇵🇪🇻🇪🇨🇱🇪🇨🇬🇹🇧🇴🇭🇹🇨🇺🇩🇴🇭🇳🇵🇾🇸🇻🇳🇮🇺🇲🇨🇷🇵🇦🇺🇾🇯🇲🇹🇹🇬🇾🇸🇷🇧🇿🇧🇸🇧🇧🇱🇨🇬🇩🇻🇨🇦🇬🇩🇲🇰🇳 United States of AMÉRICA 🇺🇲 An American is from the Continent of América. We are ALL Americans!!! I approve this message.👍 Hopefully that'll help!👍
@termineitor99t
@termineitor99t Жыл бұрын
I'm from Chile and this was interesting when I was a child and i ask my cousin who is Australian if there is another 'name' for American people but he didn't know. Now I know. By the way yes we in Latin America always call 'Americans' estadounidenses, or gringos in a friendly way (depending of the people )
@melodyclark1944
@melodyclark1944 Жыл бұрын
Interesting that you never talked about Asia. It's a huge diverse continent, but "Asian" usually refers to South East Asians.
@UXB1000
@UXB1000 Жыл бұрын
Or East Asians for that matter.
@sillygoose9791
@sillygoose9791 Жыл бұрын
Well it'd be like saying that people over in the UK should really be called 'United Kingdomians' or whatever but since it's the United Kingdom of Great Britain, we call them the British. The Irish still live in the 'British Isles', but because it has also a more specific name, we refer to it as such. Which is why there called 'South Americans', or even more specifically by their countries' name. And given we are the only nation in the Americas to call back to our geographic region (just like the British aren't the only nation in the British Isles; but are the only group to refer to this geography); I'd say it's all very fair.
@mauriziobernotti9171
@mauriziobernotti9171 6 ай бұрын
Actually in Italian ''Americans" are also refered as "statunitensi" (from the United States) but is less common.
@nunkatsu
@nunkatsu 11 ай бұрын
Brazilian here. When we talk about people born in the US, we use the word "americano" (male) or "americana" (female) most often, although "estadunidense" is also widely used, but less frequently. One may think that, because the word "americano" is used, we also use the term "América" to refer to the USA, but, oddly enough, that's not true at all. "América" refers to the continent made up of North America+South America, and we never use this word to refer to the USA, instead we say "Estados Unidos" or the abbreviation EUA. It's like using the word "magyar" to talk about people from Hungary but not calling the country "magyaria" or something like that
@elinakangas571
@elinakangas571 Жыл бұрын
If you call a Scottish person British they will get angry.
@tohfawalker159
@tohfawalker159 Жыл бұрын
Not as angry as the Irish :p
@themeltedchocolate
@themeltedchocolate Жыл бұрын
Really? That's interesting. I was aware Scottish people get angry when ignorant people use England and UK interchangeably, understandably so, but at the end of the day Scots are part of the Great Britain, thus British.
@themeltedchocolate
@themeltedchocolate Жыл бұрын
@@tohfawalker159 which Irish?
@moonpie1971
@moonpie1971 Жыл бұрын
As well they should!
@elinakangas571
@elinakangas571 Жыл бұрын
@@themeltedchocolate I once online called a Scottish man British and he became angry at me. :)
@yourenotfunnybot
@yourenotfunnybot Жыл бұрын
Btw if ur not from the U.S.A. you can just call yourself North/South American Then there's Latin American for everyone south of The United States Heck some even go so far as to use Central American But American will belong to the U.S.A. until the country changes names to something else which won't happen There is no reason for them to change and they will never change it because nobody else identifies themselves as American unless they're from the only country that actually uses it in their name [EDIT] I saw this on another comment and thought it was really nice Pan-American If you refuse to acknowledge the fact there's 2 continents and say it's all just 1 big America then Pan-American is for you Pan-American refers to being from the entire American continent but not from the country of America
@Polskie573
@Polskie573 Ай бұрын
side note when you ask someone from lets say Cuba. you think that if you ask their nationality they'll say "American" no because they are Cuban so they'll say Cuban. a person from the USA will say American because of how well they are from the USA
@MysticRyokan
@MysticRyokan Жыл бұрын
yep there are some really interesting demonyms, for example my family is from El Salvador in Central America, However El Salvador in our language of spanish just means "The Savior" in reference to the Messiah in Christianity (yep it's overall a religious country) and so the Demonym is Salvadoran which if literally translated into english would be like Savioran but yea and in the states I notice us bilingual speakers sometimes colloquially call our selves Salvi to be brief
@melodyclark1944
@melodyclark1944 Жыл бұрын
So you don't call it El Salvador?
@josegiovanigonzalezmata5570
@josegiovanigonzalezmata5570 Жыл бұрын
Here a Mexican, in the schools of Mexico (and from what I can see, in all Hispanic America), they refer to the "Americas" in a single continent. "North America" and "South America" are subcontinents within the continent of America (Central America would be considered a "region" within North America, but it is not considered another subcontinent of America). And indeed, we refer to people from the US as "Gringos" informally or "Estado unidense" as formal talk. I used to call people from the US "Americans", but one day I had to argue with a Gringo who presumed to be from "America" and I from "Beans Land" (Mexico) (I really did not give importance to his discrimination). Anyway, I told him that I am also from America and the guy just made fun of it and then I realized that in the US they teach geography in a totally different way than the rest of the American continent. We cannot consider "North American" either because just like the US, there is also Canada and Mexico and it can only be used when we talk to people from South America, Europe, etc. to locate them from which part of the American continent we are foreigners.
@JamesDunn-sk2sj
@JamesDunn-sk2sj Жыл бұрын
And yet here in the USA we typically refer to ourselves bu the state which we hail from. I.E. Some one from Florida will often refer to themselves as a Floridian, someone from Washington State will refer to themselves as a Washingtonian, someone from Hawaii would refer to themselves as Hawaiian and if they where of Polynesian decent they would be Native Hawaiian, ect. But probably the best example of this is Puerto Rico. They are citizens of the USA because they are a territory. But they more often then not call themselves Puerto Rican.
@Adrian4239
@Adrian4239 Жыл бұрын
Puerto Rico is a dependency of America and it is not a state like the others because there are only 50 states and not 51 states!
@JamesDunn-sk2sj
@JamesDunn-sk2sj Жыл бұрын
@@Adrian4239 if you read what I wrote you would see that I didn't call them a state but a territory.
@shadewolf0075
@shadewolf0075 27 күн бұрын
This is largely when talking to other Americans from different parts of the country not as a general rule of thumb
@RodrigoFernandez-td9uk
@RodrigoFernandez-td9uk 11 ай бұрын
In Spanish "gringo/a" is used colloquially, and "estadounidense" or "norteamericano/a" is used in formal contexts. "Americano" is sometimes used with industrial goods made in the US, specially cars. In Spanish speaking countries the 6 continents model is more commonly used, in which America is a single continent composed of the subcontinents of North and South America, so the word "americano/a" refers to the inhabitants of the whole landmass. Used in contrast to Spain, "América" and 'americano/a" may refers only to the Spanish speaking part. There are popular songs that use the word in that sense, eg. "Si somos americanos" written by Rolando Alarcón, and "América", singed by Nino Bravo.
@neilgagarin9331
@neilgagarin9331 Жыл бұрын
Here in Brasil its depends on context. Even more because in portuguese is impolite to repeat words in a frase, so we vary very often the terms. Thus, if there is no risk of mistakes, we surely will use American, as in: "o presidente americano" (the American president). But in the most of cases, there is a possible mistake, so we just avoid it by saying "o presidente dos Estados Unidos" (the president of united states). It is the most common form. But, in fact, we never call the country as América, is aways just Estados Unidos and everyone know and use de term estadunidense. Summarizing: If Joe Biden came to Brazil the journalist will say it on television: "O presidente dos Estados Unidos veio ao país e foi recebido pelo homônimo brasileiro" (the US president came to our country and was welcome by his Brazilian homonym) If Lula gone to US we will never say: "O presidente do Brasil foi aos Estados Unidos e foi recebido pelo homônimo dos Estados Unidos" (the president of Brazil gone to US and was welcome by homonym of US). Is sound much childish or as a joke, so in this case you may hear: "O presidente do Brasil foi aos Estados Unidos e foi recebido pelo homônimo americano" (the president of Brazil gone to US and was welcome by American homonym).
@windykingdom6153
@windykingdom6153 Жыл бұрын
Well it’s better than being called United Statesian
@lightningfletch5598
@lightningfletch5598 Жыл бұрын
French people: Sweats nervously.
@degstoll
@degstoll Жыл бұрын
@@lightningfletch5598 Umm... That's almost every Romance language.
@degstoll
@degstoll Жыл бұрын
What about United Stater?
@OfficialBlackstoneProductions
@OfficialBlackstoneProductions Жыл бұрын
How about Fredonian or Stateser?
@dansattah
@dansattah Жыл бұрын
What about the term "Vespucian", in tribute to "Amerigo Vespuci" from whom "America" is derived? That way, "Americans" would still be named after the continent, but cause less misunderstandings with Latin Americans and people outside the Americas.
@misteraskman3668
@misteraskman3668 Жыл бұрын
As a Mexican, I use "Estadounidense" in more formal settings. I don't use Yankee because I am not used to the term and I always thought it was a bit derogative. I don't like calling them "Americanos" but I do call them "Americans" when I speak in english. "Estadounidense" is mostly used by people who don't interact with the english-speaking part of the world (in my experience at least), but it is a mouthfull. I honestly just say "los de estados unidos" (the ones from the US). I do say gringo, but never to a gringo. I realized that I use that word when I am complaining about the US. I don't know. Americs sounds pretty cool to me, but I am sure thats already taken.
@clonecommanderrex8542
@clonecommanderrex8542 11 ай бұрын
Yankee is used for Northern Eastern America during the American Civil War, South states from Confederacy in the Civil used Dixie for themselves and find the term Yankee derogatory.
@ScentlessSun
@ScentlessSun 7 ай бұрын
Many people from the USA dislike being called Yankee or Gringo/gringa. When we are not around say anything you want, but it will irritate some people from the USA to call them one of these terms.
@Jimmys_Place
@Jimmys_Place Жыл бұрын
I was once told by a friend in Honduras that American referred to both continents and that as a person from the United States I should be called Estadounedense. It still makes me laugh. And I had a teacher from Massachusetts who said the correct term for people from that state was Bay Stater.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
America is not a country or a nation. Since it's neither of those, 'American' is not a nationality, a citizenship or a term exclusively for/from the USA 🇺🇲. Furthermore, an American is from the Continent of America 🌎👍 'Estadounidense' is a direct & accurate translation of the official citizenship of the United States of America 🇺🇲. Estado(State)Unido(United)Ense(Inhabitant, resident, citizen of the region or area) Estadounidense = U.S. Citizen Officially 👍
@Jimmys_Place
@Jimmys_Place Жыл бұрын
@@CaptainAmerica001 well like I told my friend, the mythological single continent of America is actually two continents not one, North and South America so we refer to people from those continents as North and South Americans or Central Americans. And no one in the United States would ever consider themselves as a Unitedstatesian when American works just fine. I mean Mexico is technically the United States of Mexico but no one calls them Unitedstatesians. And no one calls people from Brazil Federal Republicans even though their country is technically called the Federal Republic of Brazil.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
@@Jimmys_Place *Estados Unidos Mexicanos! Mexican United States or United Mexican States! You have America confused with Atlantis😁 Kinda like confusing the USA🇺🇲 for a continent or the Continent of America 🌎 for a country!😏 What does 'America' represent in the official name of the United States of America 🇺🇲? What does "Mexicanos" represent in the official name, 'Estados Unidos Mexicanos'? What does "Brasil" represent in the official name, 'Federal Republic of Brasil'?
@Jimmys_Place
@Jimmys_Place Жыл бұрын
@@CaptainAmerica001 would it make you feel better if we had named our country the United States of North America? After all these United States ain't on any other continents. Lol.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
@@Jimmys_Place What would make me feel better is for people to quit being selfish, ignorant, conceited, lazy, stubborn, help from being indoctrinated, and/or arrogant about the 2 terms. But can you answer the simple questions, especially the 1st one?😁 "What does 'America' represent in the official name of the United States of America 🇺🇲? What does "Mexicanos" represent in the official name, 'Estados Unidos Mexicanos'? What does "Brasil" represent in the official name, 'Federal Republic of Brasil'?"
@LisandroLorea
@LisandroLorea 11 ай бұрын
In Argentina we use "estadounidense". We also use "yanki" but only in casual speech. I'll understand "norteamericano" because it's common in Latin American dubs (probably it fits lip sync better) but we don't really use it, and to me it sounds more like someone from the US, Canada or Mexico I think a big difference is that when Americans say "United States of America" they interpret it as meaning "there's is a place called America which works as a union of states" while in Latam it's interpreted as "there is a union of states in the American continent", which is still ambiguous as there are other unions in the continent
@ScottJB
@ScottJB Жыл бұрын
My wife is from Mexico and they call us Gringos and Gabachos. And they often refer to the US as "el Gabacho" or "the other side" (el otro lado).
@angellara7040
@angellara7040 Жыл бұрын
Unironically she probably hates you. In America gringo is a slur In places like California
@ScottJB
@ScottJB Жыл бұрын
@@angellara7040 You don't understand Mexicans if you think that. Most of the "Mexicans" in LA are actually gringos trying to differentiate themselves to maintain an identity. They're kind of their own thing. If a Mexican friend who I know well calls me a gringo, I 100% know it's not malicious. It's all about your relationship with the person. They call their own kids things like "fatty," "big head," etc and it's all love. They're way less thin skinned than we are.
@angellara7040
@angellara7040 Жыл бұрын
@@ScottJB I'm Mexican jackass. Shut it gringo
@ScottJB
@ScottJB Жыл бұрын
@@angellara7040 Cálmate un chingo, pochito
@nathanfrentzel7197
@nathanfrentzel7197 Жыл бұрын
My proposal as a human from the United States of America is that people and thngs from my country be called "Murican." Some people already say " 'Murican" with a thick Southern accent as a joke, but my proposal is to just say it naturally in your normal accent. Honestly, it's close enough that we could easily make the switch, and it's a word we already identify with. Plus it's different enough that in context there's no confusing if you mean either of the continents or the country.
@zaybd7998
@zaybd7998 Жыл бұрын
thats actually a good idea
@chaost4544
@chaost4544 Жыл бұрын
It will be a long day in hell before I use backward Southern terminology to label what I am.
@BuzzingMeat
@BuzzingMeat Жыл бұрын
@@chaost4544 exactly😂. Doesn’t matter though, these people can cry all they want but it isn’t going to change the fact that most of the world will think of people from the USA when they hear the word American. That’s why they always calling Americans stupid and shit, they see people from the USA as American.
@wendychavez5348
@wendychavez5348 Жыл бұрын
In Spanish, persons of the Americas are innuendo as noramericanos, suramericanos, and centro americanos. You went over that detail as I was typing this comment, though it's actually incomplete. Persons of individual states or nations (as you're stating now when I'm typing this) can be called by their state or country--bolivanos or ecuadoros or colombanos, etc, and of course Canadians have their own demonym. I like this topic, because it's a slightly different approach to the topic. Thinking is usually a good thing, right?
@kermosaarse
@kermosaarse Жыл бұрын
Estonian here. In our language, the formal name of the country is "Ameerika Ühendriigid", which is a direct translation of "United States of America". We can formally also use the acronym "USA". In casual speech, we most often use words "ameerika" for the country and "ameeriklased" for the people. We might also use terms "usa" and "usakad", which derive from the acronym but are pronounced as a single word. Here's my opinion about "americans shouldn't be called americans" issue. The term "american" is so common that everyone understands that it refers to people from united states. Are canadians and brazilians offended that they are not called americans? You might introduce another term, but it's not easy to make people stop using a term that is already in use.
@CaptainAmerica001
@CaptainAmerica001 Жыл бұрын
The USA🇺🇲 is not an acronym. An acronym is an abbreviation formed from the initial letters of other words AND pronounced as a word like UNICEF, NASA, SAW, etc. Canadians & Brasilians DO call themselves Americans. America is not a country. An American is from the Continent of America.
@pearofclubs6280
@pearofclubs6280 Жыл бұрын
Let me clear this up for you. My mother is Dutch. My father is Blackfoot. My fiance is Jewish. All of us are Americans, because we are from and/or live in the USA. Even if I've never encountered anyone who wants to (both because of national pride and the often negative perception of the term internationally) someone from Canada or Paraguay is free to call themselves American if they want, because words frequently have multiple definitions. I think you're the only one with a problem here.
@flannelsone1159
@flannelsone1159 Жыл бұрын
Yeah and besides, I'd HATE to call someone a unitedstatesian XD
@BuzzingMeat
@BuzzingMeat Жыл бұрын
@@flannelsone1159 it just sound stupid. Europeans just trying to find stupid things to criticize America about.
@axxel_o
@axxel_o 7 ай бұрын
I feel that you have a huge problem reading book of history and geography , really use your brain is free
@jackdools4744
@jackdools4744 3 ай бұрын
No I’m afraid we aren’t “all American”. To be an American you must be a racial descendant of the European settlers
@bigjohn5142
@bigjohn5142 28 күн бұрын
@@jackdools4744 us blacks were here before most of you whites came on boats
@ronmaximilian6953
@ronmaximilian6953 Жыл бұрын
There's actually another North American country who's official name includes the United States, the United Mexican States. Americans aren't Canadians or Mexicans. The term just works historically. Unless you're from New England, you aren't a Yankee. And frankly, I only consider WASP and Scots Irish New Englander is to be Yankees.
@R3DACT3D9
@R3DACT3D9 Жыл бұрын
Aussie (Australian) here, g’day. 🇦🇺 Some Aussies refer to people from the USA as Yanks. Although, it is used more in informal speech. Sure it doesn’t apply to all who hail from the USA, but it’s very short and catchy.
@ScentlessSun
@ScentlessSun 7 ай бұрын
People from the southern USA dislike this. During the civil war in our country the northern part of the country were referred to as Yankees.
@A190xx
@A190xx 11 ай бұрын
The term British for those from the British Isles stems from the British Empire and so preceded the succession of Ireland, but has stuck as a popular term. Most referred to themselves as simply British, but on occasion they might use their nation as well - eg British-Irish which visitors to Ellis Island may note when reading the ledgers. For many, using Scottish, Welsh, English and Northern Irish are disliked as they are divisive, as they consider themselves part of a single nation, though separarist movements are encouraging the usage to further their views.
@Qrani
@Qrani Жыл бұрын
Interestingly enough, the word French actually does use the -ish suffix, just it has been evolved and reduced to not look like it has it. It's equivalent to Frank + -ish. It evolved from Proto-West Germanic Frankisk > Old English Frenċisċ > Middle English Frenche > Modern English French. Same with Dutch, which evolved from Proto-West Germanic Þiudisk > Old Dutch Thiudisc and Old Low German Thiudisk > Middle Dutch Duutsch and Middle Low German Düdesch > Middle English Duch > Modern English Dutch
@LokiScarletWasHere
@LokiScarletWasHere Жыл бұрын
I got a better idea for a demonym for the Japanese to use for the US: Usajin, from "Usa", short form of "Usagi", and from the phonetic way to pronounce the United States of America's acronym, USA. I honestly just like this idea because it's punny.
@whosaidthat84
@whosaidthat84 Жыл бұрын
As an American, I accept being called a rabbit
@moosefromsky3986
@moosefromsky3986 Жыл бұрын
I love it ❤️ A huge bonus because it is a pun.
@twitter.comelomhycy
@twitter.comelomhycy 7 ай бұрын
Sailor Moon!
@donavonaddison4382
@donavonaddison4382 Жыл бұрын
I can't use the word Georgian to describe myself without confusion. The state by state solution was one notable exception.
@badomen7199
@badomen7199 Жыл бұрын
Georgia is also a country below Russia, it's the exact same issue but you don't care because the group of people is smaller and more remote.
@donavonaddison4382
@donavonaddison4382 Жыл бұрын
@@badomen7199 Of course there's a Georgia south of Russia. There has to be more than one Georgia to cause the above mentioned confusion. As far as me not caring, you read your own bs into that. Though considering you could read my statement and assume I don't know about the much older Georgia, it looks like you can barely read at all.
@badomen7199
@badomen7199 Жыл бұрын
@@donavonaddison4382 I don't think you got the point, the point is it's the exact same issue, there's really no moral difference between referring to yourself as Georgian or American, I get it if you don't care, but a lot of people don't even know the country exists, and I thought you may have been trying to say that referring to yourself via state was better than country, either way works. Btw wdym bs, is it bs that I don't care? What are you even saying is bs, I wrote a good amount.
@damackabet.4611
@damackabet.4611 4 ай бұрын
​@@badomen7199their is a moral difference, our language recognizes Georgia as country, we dont recognize anyone else in the world as americans besides ourselves, an american will never think of a Brazilian as American, because in english they aren't an american, they are a south american which is a continent. Your the culture imperialist here trying to force spanish/Portuguese culture onto americans because you dislike what they call themselves. In english only people from usa can be americans because only we exist in a place called America, their are no other americans only north and south americans.
@badomen7199
@badomen7199 4 ай бұрын
bro I posted this a year ago, I have no recollection of the video or argument to refute anything you say, nor a desire to rewatch all of it. I have no idea why you decided to scroll what had to be many minutes through the comments, only to arrive on this year old comment, and decide to argue with it@@damackabet.4611
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