A Japanese is a native citizen of Japan.
The Closed Country Edict of 1635 forbade the Japanese from going to other countries. Japanese ships could not leave Japanese ports, either. A Japanese citizen that left to live elsewhere was killed upon return to Japan.
I'm not sure if this is true, but you have to live there for a number of years and you also have to be Japanese. I, myself, am not Japanese, but my friend is. And she says you have to be Japanese or at least half to be considered a citizen of Japan, but there may be other ways to be a citizen.
They never left.
A tourist visa will get you into Japan. You can get one at the Japan consulate near Sukhumvit Soi 19.
Whether a US citizen can work in Japan is completely unrelated to that person's UK residency status. It is a matter for Japanese law and regulations.
You can get Japanese coins if you travel to Japan, or if you visit a currency exchange, at an international airport or in a big city.
Japanese cannot return to Japan after living abroad.
figure it out ur self-LOSER:0
The US will recognize the child as an American citizen. Japan may allow them to claim Japanese citizenship, but I don't believe they do.
The ones that didn't die went home immediately.
The Japanese at first greeted this military victory with enthusiasm just as any patriotic citizen .