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asian african or any any other countrey

2006-10-02 09:55:25 · 31 answers · asked by fred t 2 in Arts & Humanities History

31 answers

Yes.

2006-10-02 10:03:03 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

What is quite unusual is there are those who were not born in Britain and would still see Elizabeth as their queen ,and would defend her.Perhaps the British empire in the present day is still here but in a lesser but well connected and different manner, good or bad thing .Still a lot of nations have the union in their flags.commonwealth especially.Even the state flag of Hawaii has the british union flag.As my Fijian friend says Long live the queen and her ppl when hes had a few beers.
to your question Im sure theres 2 anwsers depending on each individual.
Obeying the law of the land the utmost

2006-10-04 17:27:56 · answer #2 · answered by James C 2 · 0 1

Whether you are born in, England, Whales, Northern Ireland or Scotland (Britain) you are British your birth certificate states such is the case. Although you maybe required to register your status as a British subject because of recent legislation.

2006-10-02 21:28:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

properly between the Conservatives election pledges develop into to introduce a British bill of Rights to interchange the Human Rights Act yet like each and every thing else in the Conservative manifesto the promise has been left out through the authorities even as they were given in. it isn't adequate to pay no heed in any respect to the platform upon that you stood once you would possibly want to implement a minimum of a few of it. like the pledge on a referendum on the ecu ... and for this we are able to not stand. even as Cameron tries to commence his re-election marketing campaign i think he will locate the full grass-roots help (the activists that truly do the footwork) have all left and at the on the spot are campaigning on behalf of Nigel Farage.

2016-12-04 03:40:07 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

pretty much, if you're born & raised in this country you are English. REgardless of ur folks heritage.

But if you're born here then you're British.... what it says in the passport basically. So nationality is British, but race is dependant upon ur Parents background.

(for example, I'm a British Born Chinese, folks are from CHina. BUT I'm raised here, so that makes me English or British. But I'd rather say CHinese)

2006-10-02 10:11:51 · answer #5 · answered by Vanessa L 2 · 0 1

Being deemed a national of any nation requires that you are born in said nation. If you adopt another nation via immigration then you become a citizen which is not the same as being a natinonal. Another way of putting it is adoptive citizen or natural citizen. So if your parents are adoptive to the nation you are born in, you become a national or natural citizen. This is the same the world over and not just in the UK.

2006-10-02 10:11:19 · answer #6 · answered by bumbleboi 6 · 0 1

I think you are, yeah. I think people whose parents are immigrants, as in, the first generation to come to this country, and were not born in England, have dual nationality. e.g., if your parents are both African, and came to England in their thirties, and gave birth to you in England, you are a British African, or are British with African parents.

However, if your children are born here, they are British with an African heritage, but are not directly of a dual nationality.

Well, that's what I think anyway.

2006-10-02 10:05:06 · answer #7 · answered by old_but_still_a_child 5 · 1 2

It depends on what year you were born in, my brother is Irish (technically) but im english. We both have the same parents though! Something to do with a change in the law a few years back. I think they got rid of it after a while though...

2006-10-02 10:09:01 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

If your born in Britain then yes you are British!

2006-10-02 11:59:33 · answer #9 · answered by hypercb1 2 · 0 1

If you are born in Britain you will have a British birth certificate and you will be elegible for a British passport. So yes you will be British.

2006-10-02 09:58:31 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 4 1

You would be a citizen of whatever country you are born in except if your parents are in the military and you are born on a military base. If say your parents were in a branch of the American service in Germany and you are born on an American base in Germany, you are an American citizen because it is considered American property and soil. The same could be said of a foreign consulate.

2006-10-02 10:03:46 · answer #11 · answered by tigerlily_catmom 7 · 2 1

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