If your telling us then why are you asking?
2007-12-04 04:39:35
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answer #1
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answered by momontheedge 4
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Nationality is only one thing and one thing alone unless you have dual citizenship.
I have Jamestown ancestors. That was BEFORE the Mayflower. Also I have some ancestors that people state crossed an ice bridge from Asia many thousands of years ago and were here to greet the Vikings, English, Spanish, French and even St. Brendan. However, if a person received naturalization in some federal court today, their nationality becomes just as American as mine.
One thing I think is absolutely and totally stupid is for someone who is an American citizen, frequently not only were they born in the U.S., but their parents and grandparents were and they state "my nationality is Irish, English, Italian, German, Polish or whatever".
Your ethnicity might be a number of things but not your nationality.
In the colonial south, they had English, then came Scots, Scotch Irish, people from one of the German states, French Huguenots. My maternal grandmother who was born in 1873 was a blend of all those things. Her nationality was nothing but American. She married my grandfather in 1899 whose nationality was nothing but American, but whose ethnicities were Polish, Polish Jew, German, English and Native American.
My father was mostly Irish, orange and green.
So while my nationality is nothing but American, in my ethnicities, I am a pedigree American mutt.
2007-12-04 16:24:17
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answer #2
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answered by Shirley T 7
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It all depends on the constitution of the countries you mentioned. Citizenship could be based on two things, by blood or by birth. Children born in Italy from foreign parents are automatically Italian citizens if at least one of the parents has been an Italian resident for more than five years. Children born outside Italy from Italian parents could request citizenship even before the completion of 18 years. In the United Kingdom (England, Scotland and Ireland), only children born from UK citizens are considered citizens.
So it all depends on the citizenship of your parents and where you were born.
2007-12-04 12:59:02
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answer #3
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answered by reg 5
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Where are you a citizen? And if you have Irish and English blood, do they like each other?
2007-12-04 12:40:49
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answer #4
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answered by ima_super_geek 4
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Your are a national of the country in which you are born and has the heritage of the other countries
2007-12-04 16:28:19
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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what country do you live in? thats what nationality you are. Get your terms straight. You are asking what ethnicity you are, and you seem to already know.
2007-12-04 12:41:01
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answer #6
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answered by potato 2
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You're Italian. Good luck. 2D
2007-12-04 12:50:19
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answer #7
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answered by 2D 7
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you might be Dominican.
2007-12-04 12:41:45
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answer #8
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answered by banging bonilla 3
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well your are British . aint you
2007-12-04 12:40:10
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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