I think so, but if it is a "Chinese National", that would be a NO.
About $3.25. That's just dividing how much of U.S. debt the Chinese owns by the U.S. population. If the Chinese wanted to spread the wealth to their entire population (about 1.3 billion) each Chinese citizen would get roughly 78 cents.
According to American law, if one or both of the parents are American citizens, the child is also an American citizen. If the child is also eligible for Chinese citizenship (such as one parent being a Chinese citizen), at a certain age the child will be asked to choose citizenship of one country or the other.
You can say "ηΈδΏ‘θͺε·±" in Chinese, which means believe in yourself.
This is a tough question because you need to name yourself in Chinese first so if your name is Benjamin and you don't have a Chinese name then it would basically be Benjamin.
Technically, it would make you a British citizen. As for example, both parents are of an African origin- Ghana. Therefore, you would classify yourself as an African. You r parents would be Ghanaian, and British, which is of dual nationality; if they were born there and immigrated to Great Britain. If you were to have both a British passport and a Ghanaian one, you would be of dual nationality too. You would then classify yourself as a British Citizen, with a Ghanaian background.
It is very difficult to identify one single characteristic of an Indian citizen, though i would like to think that faith in their Gods irrespective of religion or high level of education is still the most inevitable characteristic of an Indian citizen.
It's mostly to do with ethics and laws. Imagine if you were to clone yourself. Would the clone have rights? Would it be a citizen? What if you killed it, or it killed you?
Chinese nationality law operates mainly on the basis of jus sanguinis ("right of blood"). You must also remember than China does not permit dual citizenship. In general, when a person is born in China, that person is a Chinese citizen if he or she has at least one parent holding Chinese citizenship, or if both parents are settled in China and are stateless or of "uncertain" nationality. A foreign-born person with at least one parent who is a Chinese citizen has Chinese citizenship, so long as the Chinese-citizen parent(s) have not "settled" in a foreign country. The term "settled" is usually taken to mean that the Chinese citizen parent has permanent residency in the country concerned. A person born outside China, including those with parent(s) holding Chinese citizenship, does not have Chinese citizenship if a foreign citizenship is acquired at birth, if a Chinese national parent has settled abroad. In China, children born of Chinese-foreign marriages are considered to be Chinese citizens by the government of the People's Republic of China. Basically, you have to have ethnic Chinese blood if you want to apply to be a Chinese citizen and hold a China Passport. The Immigration Department in Hong Kong and Macau is however, authorised to naturalise foreign or stateless people as Chinese citizens but you have to stay in these two regions or in China for an extended period of time and hold permanent residency. It would be helpful however,if you have relatives holding Chinese citizenship. I would advise learning Mandarin Chinese, as well as more about Chinese culture before you make this crucial decision. You should also appy for Chinese Permanent Residency and try living there for 5-7 years to help you decide if China is for you.
In reality most officers don't give a 'hoot' WHO you are - but if they ask you to identify yourself they probably have a GOOD reason for asking the question. At that point you will have to make the decision as to which you way you're going to respond. I would suggest identifying yourself...... they have "ways."
Yes because they would follow mexican's laws made by the Chinese Government
I do not believe that any chemist would choose to identify a compound by using only the melting point; why create such difficulties for yourself?