Yes. No law requires that folks working outside the USA, as in your example, be US legal residents or citizens.
No law requires that folks working inside the USA be US residents or citizens.
Everyone working in the USA must have legal authority to work here. That takes many forms.
Lessee if he is renting the residence... Lessor if he is the owner of the residence... Resident is living at his/her residence...
A person living in a rural area is typically referred to as a villager or a rural resident.
A person living in Nebraska is typically referred to as a Nebraskan.
An S corporation can be owned by any US citizen or resident who is a natural person or certain qualified entities (estate, trusts and non-profits). An S corporation is limited to a total of 100 shareholders under current law.
A person living in a rural area is typically referred to as a rural resident or a rural dweller. They may also be called country people or villagers.
The word resident can be a noun and an adjective. The noun form is a living being who lives at a particular location. The adjective form is a person in an organisation who is the strongest in a particular skill.
A person living in Anchorage, Alaska, is commonly referred to as an "Anchorage resident" or simply an "Anchorageite." The term highlights their connection to the city, which is the largest in Alaska and a cultural hub for the region.
It depends on the context of the sentence. Residence is the place - resident is the person. A person can be a resident in a residence.
The term "resident" serves as a noun referring to a person who lives in a particular place. As an adjective, "resident" describes something that is characteristic of or related to residents, such as in the phrase "resident population," which refers to the people living in a specific area. It conveys a sense of permanence or belonging to a specific location.
No he has to be accepted as a cityzen.
Yea, a Non Resident person can have life policy in his/her home country vis a vis in present living- in country.
If the deceased was a resident of Georgia, as a representative of the estate, you can "file" a will with the probate court regardless of where you live. If the deceased lived in Calif and had a living trust here moved to Georgia and only lived there one month before passing but also had a living trust there which one is valid? Do you need to be a resisdent of Georgia to file a will in that state? SEE DISCUSSION PAGE