Don't know if this is a trick question or if you just for got to hyphenate great-grand. If you just forgot the hyphen, you have eight great-grandparents. If it is a trick question, then it depends how many of your granparents you think are great to you.
The Holocaust was about race, not religion. However, religion was used as an indicator of race, so anyone with a Jewish grandparent was regarded as a Jew. The Nazis established three 'degree' of 'Jewishness':Three of four Jewish grandparents - 'full Jew'Two Jewish grandparents - 'half Jew'One Jewish grandparent - 'quarter Jew'So, regardless of your religion, if you had three or four Jewish grandparents, you were in big trouble in Nazi Germany.
I must disagree with the below.Old? definitely. Inaccurate? Ofttimes. Racist? Only if one incorrectly presupposes that the term is used to characterize hypodescent: The assignment of the perceived subordinaterace on a child of mixed lineage.I'd argue that one should be proud of their African heritage, regardless of the number of grandparents who share it.-----------------------------------------------------------------------Saying that a person has 1/16th African blood is an old, inaccurate, and sometimes racist way of saying that one great-great-grandparent was African and the other 15 great-great-grandparents were from some other racial group.It can also mean that two great-great-great grandparents, who were not married to each other, were African; or that four great-great-great-great grandparents not married to each other were African, etc., etc.
Anyone who had three or four Jewish grandparents was classified as a full Jew. Those with two Jewish grandparents were classified as half Jews and those with one Jewish grandparent were classed as quarter Jews. These laws were also the same for the Germans.
Ruby Bridges lived with her parents and grandparents near Tylertown Mississippi until she moved to New Orleans with her parents when she was four years old.
A quadrilateral family tree is one with four lines of descent. It traces the ancestry of all four of a person's grandparents.
Yes - if one of your four grandparents was Portuguese you would be called "quarter-Portuguese." The same would apply if and two great grand parents were Portuguese, for example, one maternal great grandparent and one paternal great grandparent was Portuguese
If both your parents are one fourth Irish, that means that each of them has one out of four grandparents who were fully Irish (or something equivalent). Your parent's grandparents are your great grandparents, and you have a total of 8 great grandparents. Two of your great grandparents were fully Irish, one from each of your parents. You have 2 fully Irish great grandparents out of a total of 8 great grandparents, 2 out of 8 is 1/4 so you are one fourth Irish.
You have sixteen great great great great grandparents. Half of them will be paternal and half will be maternal. You have four sets of paternal 4G grandparents.
John and both of his parents were born in the United States as were his four grandparents. All eight of his great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Most people have four grandparents, eight great grandparents,16 great great grandparents and 32 great great grandparents. If one set of your great grandparents were first cousins, then then shared one set of their own grandparents. Then you have 30 instead of 32 great great grandparents.
The Holocaust was about race, not religion. However, religion was used as an indicator of race, so anyone with a Jewish grandparent was regarded as a Jew. The Nazis established three 'degree' of 'Jewishness':Three of four Jewish grandparents - 'full Jew'Two Jewish grandparents - 'half Jew'One Jewish grandparent - 'quarter Jew'So, regardless of your religion, if you had three or four Jewish grandparents, you were in big trouble in Nazi Germany.
Yes, we all get our blood groups from our parents or even our grandparents, so you will find one of your four grandparents are A-.
Obama's father was from Kenya and Kenyans are a definitely a minority in the US. Jackson's parents were from Ireland and the Irish are a minority in the US but not as rare as Kenyans. Four of Kennedy's great -grandparents were from Ireland. Two of Ronald Reagan's grandparents were born in England.
I must disagree with the below.Old? definitely. Inaccurate? Ofttimes. Racist? Only if one incorrectly presupposes that the term is used to characterize hypodescent: The assignment of the perceived subordinaterace on a child of mixed lineage.I'd argue that one should be proud of their African heritage, regardless of the number of grandparents who share it.-----------------------------------------------------------------------Saying that a person has 1/16th African blood is an old, inaccurate, and sometimes racist way of saying that one great-great-grandparent was African and the other 15 great-great-grandparents were from some other racial group.It can also mean that two great-great-great grandparents, who were not married to each other, were African; or that four great-great-great-great grandparents not married to each other were African, etc., etc.
His last name is Bucket. He lives with his parents and his four grandparents.
Your granddaughter has four great grandmother's and presumably each had a husband. Two of them are your father and your father-in-law, but the other two are the grand parents of your daughter-in-law. You are not related to the grandparents of your daughter-in-law.
Your granddaughter has four great grandmother's. Two of them are your mother and your mother-in-law, but the other two are the grandparents of your daughter-in-law. You are not elated to the grandparents of your daughter-in-law.