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hi people you did good you tred your best
There is no bona fide tryout for the Olympic fencing events. Instead, you must prove yourself as a nationally-ranked fencer, winning events and showing that you are good enough to be selected for the team.
To help US protect their good business relationship with Great Britain.
because Britain benefited being as Britain has loads of different types of rock including coal
London is a fantastic place to live. Multicultural, Food, and this year olympic games what a place to been.
Loyalists
It's not just the Olympics, they compete as Great Britain in most international team events. For the Six Nations, it was originally the Home Championship for the four countries of Great Britain and Ireland, before they admitted France and Italy. Cricket is seen as almost exclusively English (Scotland of course competed at the last World Cup), football is down to the Home Nations (inventors of football) having four votes at the FIFA Congress. Most of the associations refuse to join together, partly fearing they'll lose their votes, and partly fearing they won't have any players good enough for a unified team. And as for the Commonwealth Games, I guess it's more of a privilege for the former owners of the Empire to field as many teams as they can (as well as England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the Isle of Man, Jersey, Guernsey and Sark also compete). (As to the Olympics, it's officially Great Britain and Northern Ireland, as Great Britain is the main island holding England, Scotland and Wales.)
The great in Great Britain doesn't mean really good, but instead means big. In the same sense that the first world war is called the great war. Great Britain is the large country of the Britons, as opposed to Brittany in France, which is the small land of the Britons.
Because they are form Great Britain and they can sing good.
Santa Claus
Great Britain
Alisdair Aird has written: 'Good Pub Guide' 'Good Guide to Free Britain' 'The Good Britain Guide 2003 (Guide Britain Guide)' 'Great Family Days Out' 'Great Food Pubs' 'The automotive nightmare' -- subject(s): Automobiles, Social aspects of Automobiles 'The Good Pub Guide 1998' 'The Good Britain Guide 2002'