Nationality usually describes the country where you were born.
Citizenship is a legal matter, that you have been registered with the government of a country as having rights as a full citizen in that country. For most people, that is the country where they are born and continue to live, but if a person moves to Another Country, citizenship may be obtained in the new country, by applying to the government.
Residence is the place where you have a permanent residence, where you spend most of your time during a year.
So a person who is born in England, moves to Canada as a child and applies to Canada for citizenship, then spends time in France as a teacher, for example, could have English nationality, Canadian citizenship and French residence.
Hi, if you are born in a country you get a citizenship of that country ( that is single citizenship). If you migrate to another country and get a citizenship from that country but you do not want to give up the citizenship of your home country then it is a dual citizenship.
Nationality is a country in which an individual exersises loyalty to as a citizen and get protection in return while domicile..
Identity is how you would describe yourself... name, weight, age, morals, values, etc where citizenship is your legal right to live in a specific country.
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nationality
A nation describes a geographical place that is defined by its borders, whether to neighboring countries or to natural boundaries, and sometimes defined by the difference in the culture and language. Nationality is basically citizenship that is granted to people who are born in a specific nation or are granted citizenship.
Nationality: Bengali Citizenship: Bangladeshi
Nationality: Bengali Citizenship: Bangladeshi
No difference in the meaning but when people talk about immigration and citizenship topics, almost all of them use the term 'dual citizenship'.
Nationality - is the country where you were born. Citizenship - is 'adopted' nationality. For example, I am British by birthright - I was born in England (as were many generations of my family). If I were to emigrate to Australia, I could apply for citizenship - however - my nationality on any legal documents would still say British.
Answer citizenshipActually, there are three (and perhaps more), namely, Nationality, Citizenship and Residence. Nationality usually describes the country where you were born.Citizenship is a legal matter, that you have been registered with the government of a country as having rights as a full citizen in that country. For most people, that is the country where they are born and continue to live, but if a person moves to Another Country, citizenship may be obtained in the new country, by applying to the government.Residence is the place where you have a permanent residence, where you spend most of your time during a year.So a person who is born in England, moves to Canada as a child and applies to Canada for citizenship, then spends time in France as a teacher, for example, could have English nationality, Canadian citizenship and French residence.
One's nationality refers to one's country, a person's citizenship.
Dual citizenship means full citizenship of one country and partial citizenship of the other country whereas double citizenship means full citizenship of both the countries.
Nationality, or citizenship as in dual citizenship [double nationalite, or double citoyennete].
Yes you can have dual citizenship.
Hi, if you are born in a country you get a citizenship of that country ( that is single citizenship). If you migrate to another country and get a citizenship from that country but you do not want to give up the citizenship of your home country then it is a dual citizenship.