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In reply to the discussion: Robert Prevost, now Leo XIV, is not the first "American" pope [View all]IronLionZion
(48,740 posts)30. Born and raised in South Chicago, Bishop of Chiclayo Peru, Cardinal of Santa Monica Italy.
People move. When someone asks me where I'm from, there are only wrong answers.
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The locals in Britain, France, Germany, Morocco, and Ireland all referred to me as an American.
TomSlick
Yesterday
#10
Europeans don't change their terminology when speaking a foreign language (such as English).
DFW
20 hrs ago
#76
I lived in Latin America for 5 years, they call people from the US "Americanos", not "Norte Americanos"
EX500rider
1 hr ago
#103
Not at my first daily newspaper job...my knuckles got rapped royally for referring to an
allegorical oracle
3 hrs ago
#97
I never like it when people say "American" and actually mean United States citizen.
sdfernando
Yesterday
#7
But I have never seen a European refer to anyone other than a US citizen as American
prodigitalson
Yesterday
#12
Yes, I live in Europe (Sweden), have been to almost every European nation state, and have never heard anyone other than
Celerity
23 hrs ago
#42
Bollocks. The continents are "North America" and "South America".
muriel_volestrangler
7 hrs ago
#83
Exactly right and well put. Let the naysayers die on this hill. Silly stuff.
FadedMullet
Yesterday
#14
this thread partially reminds me of some of the threads about the cringe (and Dem vote repellent) that is 'Latinx'
Celerity
9 hrs ago
#80
Born and raised in South Chicago, Bishop of Chiclayo Peru, Cardinal of Santa Monica Italy.
IronLionZion
Yesterday
#30
The world understands the difference between "the first American Pope" and "the first Pope.....
FadedMullet
Yesterday
#19
And we did say first Pope from the Americas when Pope Francis was elected.
IronLionZion
Yesterday
#31
First Pope from an English-speaking country since Adrian IV (England) died in 1159 (who was the only one until now).
Celerity
Yesterday
#21
Technically, did 12th Century people from England really speak "english?"
Wounded Bear
Yesterday
#28
Yes love that book. Lots of historical perspectives on life in the Middle Ages. I didn't know that there were more
biophile
3 hrs ago
#91
No. Francis was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio on 17 December 1936 in Flores, a neighbourhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Celerity
23 hrs ago
#61
Technically, maybe. But the whole world calls folks born in U. S. A. Americans.
Joinfortmill
23 hrs ago
#58
When I was visiting Europe, and I had people ask me where I was from, I would respond "The U.S."
Aristus
7 hrs ago
#84
I'm sure if you asked anyone born and living in any country south of ours "Are you n American?"
Wonder Why
1 hr ago
#101