Your blood is actually the same wherever you live and wherever you or your family came from, and does not change if you live in a place for a long time. Your question is really "How long does it take before you are considered to be a 'local' and not some foreigner?"
This is a cultural issue and is different in different places. In those places that a lot of people have moved to in the last 25-50 years, you will usually find that people are accepted as local after being there only a few years. In those places that have little or no Immigration, even the great grandchildren of migrants may still not really be thought of as "locals" by those who can trace their families in the region back hundred of years.
I have had a 1st generation Sable and both my sister and grandmother had a 1st generation Taurtaus. Please explain exactly what you want to know using reasonable US English or UK English/Commonwealth English and you WILL get a usable answer.
"Great-grandmother" in English is bisnonna in Italian.
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"Great grandmother" in English is progiagiá (Προγιαγιά) in Greek.
"Hello, grandmother!" in English means Ciao, nonna! in Italian.
Cihtli in Aztec translates to "grandmother" in English.
"Your loving grandmother" in English is la tua nonna amorevole in Italian.
what it the English to Thai translation for grandmother
The Grandmother. La/el=the Abuela=Grandmother
A grandmother is a term used to refer to a person's mother's mother or father's mother. Nana is a more specific and informal term for grandmother that some families use as a nickname or term of endearment.
"Grandmother"
Grandmother is an English equivalent of 'Bunică'.