a woman born in the united states who moved to china as a child
The county or city in which the person is born.
Really depends, if both or one of the parents are US Citizens then yes regardless if the birth occurs on a military base in the US or outside the US. Now when it comes to the birth of a person with parents not currently US Citizens then it depends on the current laws within the US and that State at the time of birth.
Children who are born in the US to US Parents will automatically become US Citizens by birth. If they are born outside the US also they can get their citizenship status through their parents.
A person who is born in the US is automatically a citizen even if his parents are not. Many Japanese had immigrated and some of them had become citizens, but they had children born here.
Anyone born on US soil is automatically a US citizen.
Naturalized citizens must apply for citizenship.
There is not 4 ways, but two. If you are born in the US you are a citizen and if you are from another country you can be naturalized a citizen. Children born to an American citizen are automatically citizens and children born in places like a military base are also citizens no matter where the base is located.
If your parents were US citizens when you were born- you automatically are a US citizen. The US embassy should have given you documents stating your citizenship during the time you were born. This is what my sister did.
Of course. African Americans are born in the US, so they are automatically citizens. To get more technical, if an African came to America and became naturalized, s/he'd be a US citizen.
Person can become a US citizen by being born to parents even if one of them is a US citizen or by birth if born in US. Another way is through the naturalization process by filing Form N-400 person can become a citizen.
No. Non-US citizens can marry US citizens. This does not automatically make them US citizens as well, though it does generally grant them permanent resident status ("permanent" as long as they stay married, anyway).
No, only those who have been U.S. citizens since birth are eligible.