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And what would be examples of them?

2006-07-01 19:54:25 · 5 answers · asked by jess 2 in Travel Asia Pacific Korea

What would be an example of them? I'm not asking for yours, just a random example.

2006-07-02 23:26:12 · update #1

5 answers

I dunno what "child d" is, but 주민등록번호 is the name for the Korean ID number. Foreigners have a similar number, but won't register at some places, like attempting to join a members club where you need an ID number.

On my foreigner card it doesn't says 주민등록번호, but I use my alien registration number when asked to provide 주민등록번호.

2006-07-02 01:45:55 · answer #1 · answered by Porgie 7 · 2 0

I'm not too sure what a child d is but a 주민등록번호 is an ID number. the first 6 letters are your birthday..year/month/day...example:960529..so that would be 1996 April 29th when you were born and the last 7 numbers I'm not too sure ...but the first 2 numbers of the second set are set on where your were born in Korea i think..that's what someone told me... you have to have been born in Korea and live there or just live there
so your number would be...for example 960529-*******...if you were on the internet and you have to type in your number that's an example of what it would look like. the stars are there so nobody would know what your number is in case you left on your computer or something..its for privacy
that may be a bit confusing..sorry

2006-07-04 00:44:22 · answer #2 · answered by Julia K 2 · 0 0

My friend married a Korean lady in Busan. He decided to marry her in Korea and then live and work there while they waited on her visa. He had the resident registration number(주민등록번호)is used to denote he is married to a citizen of Korea.
My friend and his wife had a child; this child is American, although she was born in Busan. Under this circumstance, the child needs a Child ID, but is not the same as the residence registration number, unless the child was born in America.

I married a woman in China; I have a residence registration number (resident permit) for the area we live in. I was told by a fellow professor, who is Chinese; the number is in the event of death or disaster. The other issue is if you have a death in your family, the consulate will contact the resident police department. When my mother died in 2002, the consulate contacted the police, who contacted me. This took less than twenty-four hours.

2006-07-12 10:12:15 · answer #3 · answered by Calvin of China, PhD 6 · 0 0

its your identity number thing. it will be on your passport and you'll need it (in korea) to make accounts in korean internet sites...

2006-07-05 06:20:11 · answer #4 · answered by gogogo 3 · 0 0

its your security or a number you have when you are born there or a citizen there.

2006-07-02 09:52:38 · answer #5 · answered by holla! 2 · 0 0

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