In the United States, only natural-born citizens are eligible to run for president, as stipulated in Article II of the Constitution. Therefore, an immigrant would not be able to run for the presidency unless they became a natural-born citizen, which is not possible since naturalization does not confer this status. They could, however, run for other political offices, such as Congress, after meeting residency and citizenship requirements.
ImmigrantCorrection: Emigrant, not immigrant. Immigrant is a person who comes into a country.
An immigrant is a person who moves permanently to a new country.
An immigrant is a person. "Immigrant" describes one who moved into a country, as compared to "emigrant" which is the person who left.
An emigrant is a person who leaves his/her country. An immigrant is a person who arrives and lives in another country
immigrant
immigrant
An immigrant
A Immigrant
An immigrant is a person who comes to live in a country from another country, typically for permanent residence.
An immigrant is a person who comes from one country into another. An emmigrant leaves one country for another.
There is no difference between immigrant and migrant but between immigrant (migrant) and emigrant. If a person has made the decision to leave his or her home country the person is on the one hand an immigrant and on the other hand an emigrant. If the person settles down in an other country, the people of the other country will say the person is an immigrant. But, the people of the home country of the person who has left will say the person is an emigrant. So, to sum up, if a person comes into a foreign country the person is an immigrant and if a person leaves his or her home country the person is an emigrant. come into = immigrant leaves = emigrant
an immigrant