British, though I was born in Wales.
Now then, my dad's family is fully English. My mum was born in Wales. My maternal grandmother was born is Scotland in a Scottish family, but moved to Wales at an early age, and my maternal grandfather moved to Wales also at a young age, but from Ireland and a wholly Irish family.
So yeah, I'm quite literally as British as they come, having close relatives from every country in the United Kingdom.
Of course, most of the time I say I'm Welsh, simply because it would explain my somewhat mixed accent to anyone from England, and barely anyone outside the UK has heard of Wales, so I get to watch then squirm
Auron225 said:
Irish.
Being from Northern Ireland (born and lived all my life) and having two Northern Irish parents, I can say Irish, British or Northern Irish if I want to be very specific, yet all of them are true. Why I choose Irish is because;
- If I say "British", people immediately think "English" which is not only annoying since that is false but it also seems to have more negative connotations than positive.
- If I say Northern Irish, people get confused. You'd be suprised how many don't know that it's a seperate country and how often I have to then give a mini-history lesson.
- Irish is simpler and people tend to respond with "Cool!" or "I'm 1/16 Irish!!"
At least people have heard of Ireland, even if they don't know about the north. Basically nobody outside the UK even knows Wales exists.
EDIT: I would also, and quite highly, put my nationality as European, as I am quite pro-EU.