yes...but he may be subject to certain non-resident taxes
I think that he is still an canadian citizen. But i'm just guessing.
That depends on how you define "American" and "Canadian". An American can certainly move to Canada and become a citizen, but you still will not be a "true" Canadian, as you were not born in Canada.
Canada since it was born there. That happened to me I was born in Northern Ireland but my mom in New York I am still a European Citizen not an American one.
I am holding us and Canadian citizenship and have social security no,can i still work in Canada.
yes The only way you can lose your Canadian citizenship is if it is revoked because it was obtain fraudulently, or if you renounce it formally in front of witnesses at a Canadian government office such as an embassy.
Canada is still part of the Commonwealth I believe.You will of course need a work permit but it should be straightforward.Try www.direct.gov.uk
No. The citizenship requirements are that any person born in Canada after February 15, 1977 is not a citizen unless, at the time of the birth, at least one parent was already a Canadian citizen or permanent resident as well. Thus, because neither parent is a Canadian citizen, the child will not be either. Egypt will still claim them as (or they can claim themselves to be) a citizen of Egypt though, as they were born to two Egyptian parents.
I am not certain what you mean by "options" but your status is a US citizen which means you would be required to obtain a US passport to enter Canada. If your father still holds Canadian citizenship you might be eligible for dual citizenship but that would be determine by Canadian laws not US laws.
you can stay up to six months in Australia with out a job or a work program As long as you have permission [ a visa ] to travel as a tourist or reside as a registered alien in some countries. Myself, I have been living out of Canada [ in Southeast Asia ] for about eleven years, and have recently met a Canadian citizen who had been employed by Walt Disney Studios as a cartoonist for almost 30 years, and is now retired and living in Las Vegas, Nevada. He is still a Canadian citizen because he has never applied for American citizenship, in the 40 years he has lived and worked outside of Canada.
This person is still an American citizen and should have no problem re-entering the states if he wishes. I would of course suggest checking with someone from U.S immigration services first
American citizenship cannot be conveyed via marriage. The Canadian can apply for naturalization. American citizenship cannot be conveyed via marriage. The Canadian can apply for naturalization.
That's because Bell's family immigrated to Canada and lived in Canada before the Canadian Citizenship Act was passed.So no one could legally become a Canadian Citizen until 1947 (over 20 years after Bell's death). He would have been classified as a British subject and citizen as Canada was still part of the British Empire. He has since been classified as an honorary Canadian, because many of his ideas and experiments originated in Canada, as well as his family.During the last 30 years of his life, he spent increasing time in his Nova Scotian "summer" house. This is the last place he resided, he both died and chose to be buried in Canada.