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  1. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
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    I think officially you have to have lived in a country for at least 5 years to become an official citizen of that country. To determine your nationality however, that would be the country you were born in, i.e. I'm Scottish, but my step-gran was born in Hong Kong so she's... Hong Kongish?

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
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    Quote Originally Posted by Minstrels View Post
    If you're born in the country you're the nationality of that country. If your parents are both Indian and you're born in Bradford you're English. You may wish to class yourself as "Indian hardcore colours, we'll knock you down in our Nissan Micras" however you will be English. That's where your birth documents are held, in England.
    Lol at your use of Bradford.

    Us in Leeds like to call it Bradistan (no racist offence meant, but there are many people from the Indian community who live there, and it has the UK's largest mosque. £8m...)
    That went fast.

  3. #13
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    in the us you have to be born here.
    or live here for 14 years than take a citizenship test to become a real citizen
    1. Jeremy 1129 up, 295 downA named based on the biblical name Jeremiah. Used as a name for children who are blessed with a large brain and/or penis. Also used as a replacement for "perfect".
    We had a child and it had a very large penis so we named it Jeremy.

  4. #14
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    It is called citizenship .

  5. #15
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    Jul 2006
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    He's Welsh by nationality/birth. His English and Tunisian heritage is his ethnicity.

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