Well, I wake up in the morning at 6am, grab a Starbucks coffee, drive to work, work at my job, eat lunch at Burger King, work some more. 8 hours later I drive home, play some Call of Duty, eat dinner, make love to my wife, fall asleep. The next day I repeat the same process. Unless it's my day off from work then I just go to the beach or have a barbecue. Then go to a club or a bar at nigt
It depends on your definition of "a lot". Puerto Rico has approximately 3,670,000 residents. As of 2012 it is the third most densely populated state/territory/district of the in the United states behind the District of Columbia and New Jersey with 1082 people per square mile on average.
About 4,000,000 are living there just fine in 2010.
Good question. I wake up everyday asking myself that.
Do we have indigeneous people? I reckon the Spanish eliminated them all. As for Puerto Ricans per se, they live like anyone else.
puerto Rica
No such bird existed.
high in the mountains
Yes, what little is left.
it lives in the el yunque rainforest
If you currently live in Texas, you are required to have a Texas Driver's license. If you do not live in Puerto Rico, you can not have a Puerto Rican Driver's license.
No. There are no indigenous people that live in Antarctica: it's too cold.
To live a better life. It is very poor over there.
450,000 or more Hispanics live in the Orlando area. Majority are puerto rican.
Wrong! She was NOT born in "Nuyorican, Puerto Rico" because no such place exists. FACT: LaLa Vasquez was born in BROOKLYN, NEW YORK. LaLa Vasquez is Puerto Rican/American. Nuyorican is a term derived from combining "New York" and "Puerto Rican" and is specifically used to describe Puerto Rican people who moved from Puerto Rico to New York to live and/or Puerto Ricans born in New York (such as LaLa) Before you post an answer on this site, please do some research and post something intelligent and not stupid misinformation.
You may live anywhere you so desire and seek employment where you choose.
Technically, Puerto Ricans don't immigrate to the U.S., since they already hold citizenship, but there are now between 3 and 4 million people on the mainland of Puerto Rican descent, or almost as many people as live in PR itself (4 million).