If you are an Italian citizen you can live in Italy whenever you like as long as you like, regardless of your other citizenships.
Yes, you will be able to obtain the Turkish passport. You might even obtain dual citizenship.
If you lived in Denmark between 1969 and 1982 and you are currently living in Pakistan, you cannot be given the Denmark passport because the country does not permit dual citizenship.
You must move to Mexico with your spouse and live there for two years with an immigrant visa, then you can apply for Mexican citizenship. You can have both a Mexican and a US passport and be a dual citizen. If you were not married to a Mexican citizen, you would have to live there for four years.
It depends how long you want to stay. if you want to stay and live there you need a passport and a visa, issued by the American embassy. if you only want to vacation there, you need a passport.
No, you do not have to get your passport in the county you live in. You can apply for a passport at any passport acceptance facility in the United States.
No, you do not have to get a passport in the county you live in. You can apply for a passport at any authorized passport acceptance facility in the United States.
Yes, you are. But you need to live in Brazil. After a year, then, you can apply for Brazilian citizenship.
If you have a green card and have lived in the US for at least five years; then apply for American citizenship and become a dual citizen of France and the US. Why giving up your French passport!?* If you are just a French citizen and do not live in the US, thinking about just exchanging the two nationalities with eachother, the answers is no.
The Russian immigrants settled in new york with no money, no English, no place to live here. "Help me please! See my passport. Give me one rule then heal me or I will put money on your face,"some of them said.
If you were born in England, you would know that there is no such thing as an English passport. Citizens of the United Kingdom (including England) have British passports.
No. Your passport comes from the country in which you are a citizen. If you're not a UK citizen, you shouldn't have a UK passport no matter where you live. If you've got dual citizenship (your parents were US citizens, but you were born in the UK, or vice versa), then you're not required to have passports from both countries. It's usually more convenient for your passport to be from the country you actually live in (especially if you plan to travel outside it and return), but it's not, strictly speaking, required. What you need from the country in which you're living is not a passport but a visa. Unless, of course, you're a citizen of that country as well, in which case you just need proof of citizenship; a passport is only one form of such proof.