This is no answer but:
You might elaborate a little on your question, if you expect anybody to actually give you accurate information.
Do a quick search on New York social colloquialism and "street etiquette".
Different cities across the globe have their own unique social likes and dislikes, and this can even go so far as to say that some locals can even tell an "outsider" from someone "from the block" just by the way they carry themselves.
Clothes, speech and colloquialisms are all judged by people who consider themselves to be "local", and depending on where you are, there could be any number of different reactions to this.
I live in Australia, I've been to Europe, I've never been to America, so this is at BEST secondhand information from a source you would really have no reason to trust, but, I've heard that lower-middle class New York citizens have a tendency to xenophobic emotional responses to being "questioned" by someone who isn't local.
Here's an online subcultural colloquialism; lrn 2 internet. also, u need to lurk moar.
Hope I've helped
no... it was rules by the king in England
no
Yes, but they did not have laws to folow. If you are wanting to know what the rules are look it up.
a royal colony is where the crown rules a colony in america, so basically a king or queen ruling a colony far away an example is new york
The New York Colony was governed as a Royal Colony. The Colony of New York existed from 1609 to 1692.
New York Colony had no kings.
No, there was no problem between the Colony of New Hampshire and the colony of New York.
New York was originally part of the New Netherlands colony.
The New York colony started when King Charles II decided to send his brother, the Duke of York, to drive out the Dutch from New Netherland. Therefore, New York was then named after the Duke of York.
The New York colony was found in 1664.
The People in the New York Colony are working on making a Bigger Colony.
Originally New Amsterdam a Dutch Colony it became the English Colony of New York.