If your mother is one quarter Puerto Pican, then you are half of that, or one eighth Puerto ican...unless your father is also Puerto Rican. If he's full Puerto Rican, then you'd be 5/8 Puerto Rican. If he's half, then you'd be 3/8. If he's one quarter, you'd be two eighths, or one quarter.
It depends on how much percentage of PR she has.
It has 278 pages. When I Was a Puerto Rican was written by Esmeralda Santiago. It is a memoir.
10 YEARS $500,00
No... much like the rest of the world Puerto Rico is a mixture of skin colors. You can have Puerto Ricans with dark skin, olive skin, white skin, etc. Puerto Rican's are descendant from a diverse mix of Spaniards, Africans, Taino indians, and others.
Puerto Rico is part of the US, so the US dollar is used there. There is no separate, specifically Puerto Rican, money.
The same, P.R. uses US coins.
To find your Puerto Rican ancestors you will have to trace your family tree. Begin with your parents or grandparents to learn all you can about your family. Once you find out as much as possible, head over to the library. They are a good resource to locate records to help trace your family tree back even farther.
yes. it is actually an art from puerto rico. known as "puerto rican credit card fighting" It is how we .. convince.. people to let us borrow their things. It has been passed down generations and can pretty much pwn everyone and everything. You know how Dobby died in Harry Potter? Bellatrix used a puerto rican knife throw technique.
Puerto Rico has US currency, so they use US Dollar and its worth what the USD is worth.
You can marry her if you really love her,but if you don't love her as much, then wait a while until you know the real person inside of her.
It is an MEDC.
The people of Puerto Rico weave their distinctive ethnic identity from three historical traditions: Spanish colonial, Afro-Caribbean, and North American. One segment of the population, derogatorily referred to as "Nuyoricans," are children born to Puerto Ricans living in New York City. The often impoverished condition and ambivalent cultural status of mainland Puerto Ricans adds yet another dimension to Puerto Rican identity, with some segments of the population incorporating urban street-survival methods and outlooks into their ways of life. Puerto Ricans speak Spanish, although it is distinctly different from the Spanish spoken in other Latin American or Caribbean regions. The ability to speak English is widespread, owing to the high rates of migration between Puerto Rico and the U.S. mainland and to the practice of teaching English in many of the private and public schools. At the university level, much of the instruction is in English, and the exchange of faculty and students between U.S. mainland and Puerto Rican universities is quite common. The teaching of English in the primary and secondary public schools has been a subject of much debate in Puerto Rico, since many regard the teaching of English instruction as an infringement upon Puerto Rican cultural autonomy. Others view the lack of English instruction in school as a barrier to statehood; still others view it as a mechanism for maintaining the island's status quo.