Nope, you can only have a single social security number once you lose this one the old one becomes discarded and SHOULD not be linked to you anymore, or anyone for that matter.
No, you cannot. If somehow you have two numbers in your name, go to the local SS office and get that corrected. Bring a birth certificate.
No. The red numbers on the back of a social security card are control numbers that verify the authenticity of the card. They serve no other purpose.
The Social Security Administration issues Social Security numbers.
Since social security numbers have numeric values, a social security number is an example of a qualitative variable.
None at all. That information is not part of a Social Security number. Numbers are issued in sequence- one after the other- in different regions.
No. The red numbers on the back of a social security card are control numbers that verify the authenticity of the card. They serve no other purpose.
The "lowest" social security number (001-01-0001) was the one issued to Grace D. Owen of Concord, New Hampshire the first three digits of social security numbers are used as identifiers for where a person was born
Usually social security numbers are formatted as text, instead of numbers.
No. Social Security numbers have nine digits.
The number of quarters (three-month periods) an employee has worked and the amount of money an employee has contributed to the Social Security Trust Fund. Social Security numbers are also linked to Medicare and some other services provided by the federal government.
A person cannot legally have two Social Security numbers. On occasion, the Social Security Administration may cancel an old number and transfer a person's records to a new number if the person's life or safety is in jeopardy, or in certain cases of identity theft. Only the new number will be valid.Beware companies offering to repair your credit by providing you with a new number. This is fraudulent.
Social Security numbers are quantitative and not qualitative. This is due to the fact that they are numerical in nature.
my @$$