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You can just call us 'sexy'. Or exalted ones.

@tinye: what the fuck dosage of lorazepam were you on?! 0.o
Yanks if they live in the north. Rednecks if they live in the south.
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DubConqueror: Just now something weird struck me (which is strange, as it's weird as long as the name exists, yet the usage is so common, it doesn't strike as weird):

Citizens of the United States are usually called 'Americans'. However, an American is everyone living in America, from Canada up in the north of North-America, through Panama in Middle-America, up to Argentina in South-America.

Canadians, people from Panama, Argentinians are all Americans. So what is the proper name for people in the United States of America?

'Staters'?
I can't say how other countries/cultures in the world think about it but I can say as a Canadian that the unadorned term "American" universally refers to the people of the United States when used in Canada and any other countries in the Americas. I have seen some Europeans refer to people anywhere in the Americas as "American", but the people of the Americas ultimately are the ones who decide what they're called and Canadians are known as "Canadians" and should be referred to that way (many Canadians find it insulting for people to refer to them as "American" unless there is a "North" prepended to that). People of the US refer to themselves as American, people in Mexico as Mexican, etc. etc. The only place that universally refers to its people as "Americans" is the USA.

If one is referring to the people of the continent then it'll either be North Americans, South Americans, or Central Americans, but "Americans" consistently refers to the US. Additionally, "Native Americans" is a term that native peoples often use to describe themselves regardless of current country definitions, however "Native people", "First Nations" and other terms are commonly used by groups/individuals as well, and while the term Native American could theoretically apply to anyone throughout the Americas, it is generally used only by people who descended from the original native peoples here.

I have noticed though that some people do refer to people in the americas as "American" and while I don't know how the people in each country feel about it, I do know that in Canada we do not refer to ourselves with that term and some people in Canada find it outright offensive to be called American much in the same way someone in any other country would likely be offended if someone referred to them with a term used exclusively by the people of another country.

It's similar in nature to England, Wales, Scotland, Great Britain, Ireland, Northern Ireland, and the United Kingdom. Refer to someone from the United Kingdom as living in England, or being English - who infact is not in England but rather say in Scotland and they'll rip your head off. :) I learned the safe term to use is always United Kingdom, but only for the countries that are in fact a part of the UK. :) Beats remembering all of the finer details.

If someone wants to refer to the people of all of the Americas the only universally safe term I can think of that would be both unambiguous and accepted here would be "North and South Americans" or "North, Central, and South Americans".

Another option though is to just use whatever term you think/feel is right and if you're wrong in the eyes of the recipient, they'll surely correct you with vim and vigor. :oP

Occasionally I've seen (and used myself) the term "USians" in a slang sense among friends although that's just slang and not terribly wide spread, certainly not official by any stretch. :) "Murkins" is also popular, and both "Cannuck" and "Cannuckistani" are slang'ish for Canadians. :)

Anyhow... for more tips on how to refer to people over here using our native ways... play Grand Theft Auto 5 for all sorts of great tips! LOL
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skeletonbow: It's similar in nature to England, Wales, Scotland, Great Britain, Ireland, Northern Ireland,
And Bermuda.