Quebec
This question does not apply to the U.S. constitution since it has been completed already as of September 17, 1787 after over a year of debate. The time you need to read the constitution depends on your degree of literacy and term-knowledge.
On August 29, 1947, the Drafting Committee was appointed, with Dr. B R Ambedkar as the Chairman along with Acharya Kriplani, Pandit Nehru, Pandit Govind Ballabh Pant, Maulana Azad, Sardar Patel and Dr Rajendra Prasad and many others as members. A Draft Constitution was prepared by the committee and submitted to the Constituent Assembly on November 4, 1947. The Assembly met, in sessions open to public, for 166 days, spread over a period of 2 years, 11 months and 18 days before adopting the Constitution. After many deliberations and some modifications, the 308 members of the Assembly signed two hand-written copies of the document (one each in Hindi and English) on the January 24, 1950. Two days later, the Constitution of India became the law of all the Indian land.
Canada was the first country created by legislation. The British North America Act (now the Constitution Act) created Canada as an independent nation on July 1, 1867.
Canada is an independent nation and does not require permission from Her Majesty to declare war on any other nation. Theoretically, Canada could even declare war on (Heaven forbid!) Britain. It would be an interesting hypothetical perplexing constitutional question whether doing so would constitute an act of high treason. (lol)
No. It was still a British colony. Confederation was formalized in 1867, at which point Canada became the Dominion of Canada. While still a British possession, there was a move toward more independence, as the colonies were becoming very expensive to maintain for the British Crown. We had certain obligations to Britain, for instance, we had to go to war if they declared it. After World War I, Canada more or less gained complete independence from Britain, with one holdover, the British North America Act (in effect, the Canadian constitution), which remained a British act, and could only be modified by their parliament. In 1982, the Constitution was formally repatriated to Canada, at which point we had total independence to conduct our own affairs.
The Constitution states the establishment of the government and the rules for that government. See the link below for the complete US constitution.
The U.S. Constitution was complete in 1787.
The Bill of Rights.
Connecticut!
No. Nothing in a state constitution can over ride the federal constitution. There are specific things listed in the federal constitution that are limited only to the federal government.
A sovereign state means, it has complete authority over its own territory. No other states can interfere in its sovereignty. If a sovereign state has its own constitution then, constitution is sovereign to enable its rule and regulation in its own geographical area which is called constitution sovereignty.
North Korea
One thing the constitution did for the United States was that it helped improve the nation to where it could have freedom in which the choices Americans make. The constitution also helped the United States become complete. It helped to make wars, violence , and murder to not be used to force someone to do something. The constitution is greatly accepted.
He kept complete notes of the entire convention.
A sovereign state means, it has complete authority over its own territory. No other states can interfere in its sovereignty. If a sovereign state has its own constitution then, constitution is sovereign to enable its rule and regulation in its own geographical area which is called constitution sovereignty.
The "national assembly " didn't write the constitution, but congress wrote it from May 1778 to September 1778. The United States has never had a National Assembly.
On September 17, 1787, the Constitution was completed, followed by a speech given by Benjamin Franklin, who urged unanimity. THEN they signed it.