The answer is Italian
AnswerIf at least one of the parents are either born in Malta or are Maltese citizens, the child would be entitled to Maltese citizenship.In other cases, the child will receive any other citizenship the parents may have.
The nationality of a child depends on the laws of the country he/she is born in. If the child is born in the United states, then would be a citizen of the United States, an American. Some countries recognize dual nationality, the nationality of the parents, plus the country where he/she is born, such as a child born in Sweden of American parents would be both.
The child's Nationality would be that of his or her parents, the status of the child's citizenship might be determined by which country held jurisdiction over the waters the ship was in when the child was born.
There's a difference between nationality and the so called ethnicity. Nationality tells you which country the person is born in or is a citizen off, ethnicity attempts to describe the person's racial makeup. If the child is born in Africa, then his nationality would be of a African country, like Zimbabwe, Congo, South Africa, Ethiopia, etc.
If he wanted to be considered British then YES.
She was born in Gloucestershire, England.
If they are only temporarily living in the UK, the child would be considered a foreigner by the British, but probably wouldn't become an American until the US birth documentations were filled out.Answer.I would have thought the lucky child would have dual nationality as the birth would have to be registered where the child is born.Answer.That is a tricky question. I would have thought they would only adopt a small percentage of UK nationality, and the rest would be US Nationality. If they stayed in the United Kingdom for 5 Years or more, they would be regarded as a British Citizen.But they are idoits America is a country that is ruinned.AnswerThe child would have US not UK citizenship. For the child to have UK citizenship the parents must be UK citizens or be settled in the UK.
It depends on the parents. If they are French, so will you be. If they are different you will be the nationality they are but if you have, say, an English mom and an Indian dad than you will be part-English-part-Indian. Hope that helps xxx
Joseph Malta was born in 1918.
Because pregnant astronauts are not allowed to travel in space during their pregnancy, this situation would never really arise. Hypothetically, however, I think that there would be two possibilities. 1. The child would automatically inherit whatever nationality the mother is. 2. The child's nationality would depend on which country the spacecraft belongs to. It's a very interesting question, though I doubt that we will ever actually need to know the answer.
He is Australian born with Yugoslavian parents.
By nationality and citizenship-- yes. By blood-ethnicity-- not necessarily.