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It's really annoying how the Brits use the reverse order for nationality from us, so one always has to check to see whether the article is most-likely written in British English or American English to know what the text means. In the US, the first-listed nationality is the origin one. In the UK, the first-listed nationality is the destination one.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/know-ketamine-queen-accused-matthew-perrys-death-rcna166892
Article on the same incident, but from an American publication:
https://www.news9live.com/entertainment/hollywood/matthew-perry-death-case-know-everything-about-jasveen-sangha-ketamine-queen-2658616
E.g.:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Jamaicans
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_Americans
Just asking for confusion via ambiguity.
EDIT: and you can't always be absolutely certain that a given publication is going to consistently use American English or British English grammar. I remember one Guardian article that used British-style single quotes when quoting text, then used a snippet of text with double quotes from an American source that was probably copy-pasted without converting the quote style from double to single quotes, then just for some reason also used the American style later in the article. And that's a major publication, which presumably has professional editors. A lot of people writing stuff aren't going to even be in that position. At least with quoting grammar, it's not as if there's likely much potential for confusion, but my point is that it's not as if there is rigorous conversion always happening.
Well maybe you yanks could follow the established norms of the language instead of being the only nation that consistently fucks up the language and then bitches about it.
Which one is main and which one is modifier? That's how to write it, whichever works in your head.