Also include country of residence.
I'm English, have Irish blood and Australian.
Live in Australia.
Just to see how diversed this community is.
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Also include country of residence.
I'm English, have Irish blood and Australian.
Live in Australia.
Just to see how diversed this community is.
I'm Irish, Polish, German, Scotch/French Canadian not really sure on that part, and maybe indian. Because the first time my last name came around was during the French and Indian war. When the French were in Nova Scotia some of them ran into the woods and mated with some of the Mi'kmaq indians. BUt then on my great grandpas passport it was Scotch Canadian so I need to do some reseach on that. I live in the USA.
[QUOTE="ShadowsDemon"]I live in Australia, but I'm Polish, German, Russian, Egyptain, Leb, French and Swedish. Yep. :Dchaoscougar1You gotta be related to AP Nope. ;)
[QUOTE="ShadowsDemon"]I live in Austrlia...chaoscougar1You gotta be related to AP
Didn't she say she lives in England?
OT, Welsh/British in Wales/GB, take your pick.
You gotta be related to AP[QUOTE="chaoscougar1"][QUOTE="ShadowsDemon"]I live in Austrlia...Words-of-Sorrow
Didn't she say she lives in England?
OT, Welsh/British in Wales/GB, take your pick.
No, she lives in AU, in the same city as me actually.Brazilian. Heritage is native american (ergh, native americans from Brazil :P) @ roughly 12,5%, German @ roughly 25%, Italian @ roughly 25%, and then you have a Spanish, French and Portuguese heritages spread across great grandfathers and great grandfathers. From my features you'd say I got most of the Italian heritage, though - dark hair, not-so-small nose and a bad temper.
I live in Brazil, and I don't plan on leaving anytime soon. If I were to live in another country, it would most likely be Canada - or even the U.S. (New England) - the two months I stayed there (Vancouver) were fantastic.
p.s.: Ho boy, lots of aussies here it seems :o.
Born and living in Ireland, but I hold English citizenship. SteverXIII
I thought British citizens automatically have citizenship in every country in the U.K.. That's not how it works? So, how hard is it for a British citizen to get citizenship in other countries in the U.K. aside from the one they were born in?
[QUOTE="Words-of-Sorrow"][QUOTE="chaoscougar1"] You gotta be related to APShadowsDemon
Didn't she say she lives in England?
OT, Welsh/British in Wales/GB, take your pick.
No, she lives in AU, in the same city as me actually.Well, what are you waiting for? Get on a bus, hitch a cab, or drive youreslf to her home. Do whatever you can to get to her. She's waiting for you, bro.;)
[QUOTE="SteverXIII"]Born and living in Ireland, but I hold English citizenship. BluRayHiDef
I thought British citizens automatically have citizenship in every country in the U.K.. That's not how it works? So, how hard is it for a British citizen to get citizenship in other countries in the U.K. aside from the one they were born in?
I thought everyone that lived in any of the European Union countries had an 'European Citizenship' that allowed them to freely roam across any of the EU countries.
[QUOTE="BluRayHiDef"]
[QUOTE="SteverXIII"]Born and living in Ireland, but I hold English citizenship. iHarlequin
I thought British citizens automatically have citizenship in every country in the U.K.. That's not how it works? So, how hard is it for a British citizen to get citizenship in other countries in the U.K. aside from the one they were born in?
I thought everyone that lived in any of the European Union countries had an 'European Citizenship' that allowed them to freely roam across any of the EU countries.
Are you being sarcastic?
[QUOTE="FMAB_GTO"]Lebanese,nothing else.Iszdope
My uncle is Lebanese.
He is a legend. Would do just about anything for people deserving.
Awesome. Are you there now..? Getting a bit scary again there.
Sounds like a cool man :3 yeah living here,and you're right...things don't seem to be looking bright...Loyal subject of Her Britannic Majesty (ie British, specifically from wales) I don't really understand how country of residence is all that separate from nationality (unless you moved there). Like I don't get how someone who was born in america and whose entire living family was born in america can go around saying 'i'm irish lol'. No you're notEJ902
They'd have Irish blood. They're ethnically Irish.
[QUOTE="SteverXIII"]Born and living in Ireland, but I hold English citizenship. BluRayHiDef
I thought British citizens automatically have citizenship in every country in the U.K.. That's not how it works? So, how hard is it for a British citizen to get citizenship in other countries in the U.K. aside from the one they were born in?
The four nations of the uk mean nothing externally, anyone born in the uk gets british citizenship because it's one country for all purposes and intents (ie there's no such thing as english/scottish/welsh/n.irish citizenship). I'm assuming stever's from the republic of ireland, a separate country that used to be part of the uk, there's special conditions that let them have british citizenship.There's no such thingThey'd have Irish blood. They're ethnically Irish.
BluRayHiDef
[QUOTE="BluRayHiDef"][QUOTE="SteverXIII"]Born and living in Ireland, but I hold English citizenship. EJ902
I thought British citizens automatically have citizenship in every country in the U.K.. That's not how it works? So, how hard is it for a British citizen to get citizenship in other countries in the U.K. aside from the one they were born in?
The four nations of the uk mean nothing externally, anyone born in the uk gets british citizenship because it's one country for all purposes and intents (ie there's no such thing as english/scottish/welsh/n.irish citizenship). I'm assuming stever's from the republic of ireland, a separate country that used to be part of the uk, there's special conditions that let them have british citizenship.Thanks for the explanation.
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