"English" as a term has been a mixed bag for over a thousand years since various groups traveled, mixed, and killed each other over and over. At best you could try using "Anglican" but even then too many mouthpieces in the media will intentionally avoid using certain labels when it proves useful.
Even Scottish can be a bit nebulous once you start looking at some of the subphenotypes like Celtic vs Picts. We all get labelled under the one term but the observed variety has its own terminology people might not be aware of.
I think I fall under the Celtic category of dark hair and dark eyes but also not pale enough to appear porcelain as some redheads end up, which can still be very common since Scotland has the highest proportion of redheads in the world with 14% while Ireland is just behind with 13%.
"English" as a term has been a mixed bag for over a thousand years since various groups traveled, mixed, and killed each other over and over. At best you could try using "Anglican" but even then too many mouthpieces in the media will intentionally avoid using certain labels when it proves useful.
Even Scottish can be a bit nebulous once you start looking at some of the subphenotypes like Celtic vs Picts. We all get labelled under the one term but the observed variety has its own terminology people might not be aware of.
I think I fall under the Celtic category of dark hair and dark eyes but also not pale enough to appear porcelain as some redheads end up, which can still be very common since Scotland has the highest proportion of redheads in the world with 14% while Ireland is just behind with 13%.