No. I don't know of any country in which birth, marriage or certificates have a raised seal. Obviously, if a photocpy or translation of a birth certificate is notarized - that is, duly certified as accurate - then the person notarizing the certificate would normally apply a raised seal.
There is no law that says birth certificates cannot be copied. The problem is that if official proof of birth is required, the copy will not have the state/county raised seal as certification of authenticity.
No
Whether or not the document released as Barack Obama's official birth certificate should have an embossed seal is unclear at this time. There is evidence that other birth certificates generated within the same time frame as Obama's do have the embossed seal, however, no written policy has been published publicly, nor has any official addressed the question directly. If Hawai'i's policy is to include embossed seals on birth certificates, and if the seal is not included on the birth certificate released in April, there is little doubt that the White House can produce one that includes the embossed seal.
Jake Seal's birth name is Jacob Seal.
Seal (noun) in German is das Siegel, to seal is versiegeln The animal is called der Seehund
Seal's birth name is Seal Henry Olusegun Olumide Adelo Samuel.
Esmond Seal's birth name is Esmond Francis Seymour Seal.
Super Seal - 1976 is rated/received certificates of: USA:G
Not in Georgia. It has to have the raised seal. Don't know about anywhere else.
Seal Harris's birth name is Harris, Cecil.
Seal Island - 1948 is rated/received certificates of: Finland:S USA:Approved
You can check your degree certificate to see if it is original or not by looking for a raised seal on the certificate. Usually an original will have such a raised seal, a copy will not.