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Asking For Where My Father Was Born Type Answer And It Says It

What type of questions are asked in a passport interview?

Following is a list of questions that may be asked during interview for passport..1.What is my full name?2. Spell out my full name?3. Which address did IPS sent you back your document?4. Which method you used to send passport application?5. On electoral sheet, who else is registered in that house?6. My Wife’s Date of Birth?7. How long have you lived at your current address? Where did you live before address and postcode?8. When did you open your Bank account?9. Who do you bank with at this address?10. Do you have a mortgage?11. Credit card issuer and how many cards you have?12. My mother Full name, her date of birth and place of birth?13. My father Full name, his date of birth and place of birth?14. Parent’s marriage date?15. My countersignature, his name, profession, How old he will be?Besides this , normal questions such as profession and other related questions may be asked.Not neccessarily all of the above questions may be asked , but from the given above questions , they are to be asked.Hope it helps.

Can i call the Hospital where I was born and ask for my blood type after 18 years?

I'm 18 years old. I was born in KY.I am adopted but am currently in contact with both biological parents.I know the hospital where I was born and i can most likely figure out the doctor. I was told that hospitals keep birth records and tests and stuff for a long time but would they keep them for 18 years and would I be able to get the information I need

If people ask where are you from, do I answer the country where I'm born in or the country where I live or my nationality?

My best friend asks me, “If, for the rest of your life, you had to either stay within 100 miles of your home, or to forever be more than 100 miles away from home, which one would you pick?”I think about this for a moment. But the only response I can give is: “Where’s ‘home’?”At this point in our lives, we both have several answers. “Home” could mean the city where I was born and raised, which I know like the back of my hand. Or it could mean my parents’ house, which I go “home” to for the holidays. Or it could mean the room I live in now, which I go “home” to every night, but which still feels a bit like a stranger to me.“I don't know,” says my friend. “I guess it's up to you. Choose the one that makes you tempted to say ‘I’d stay.’”And after I think about it that way, I know exactly where home is.I think the question “Where are you from?” works in a similar way. If you can give multiple answers to a question like that, then it’s entirely up to you to decide which one truly belongs to you.In some specific cases, of course, you can probably tell which answer they're looking for. If “Where are you from?” is being asked by someone who’s curious about your accent, you give them the country where you acquired it. If “Where are you from?” is coming out of the mouth of a glowering airport security agent at a foreign airport, you give them your nationality, and tack on a “sir” at the end of it, for good measure.But if you're just asked where you're from in conversation, then how you respond is entirely up to you. You can answer with the country that you feel the most attached to. You can answer with the country that you live in now. You can answer with a list of every country where your shoes have touched the ground.There is no one right answer.Speaking as an Asian-American who was born and raised in the USA, I can tell you that I've heard the question “No, I meant where are you really from?” more times than I can count on two hands. And trust me, if that question makes you change your answer, then you’re answering it wrong.The right answer is the answer that feels right to you. That's all the affirmation you need.

I haven't asked to be born. Do I owe anything to my parents?

I can predict this question may have different opinionated answers depending on who comments it. This will not be any different. This will be opinionated. This wasn’t my original idea. This came from a website, forgot which site. Sorry! But the simple answer is no. You do not owe your parents anything.Your parents made a conscious decision to have you ( unless you were made on accident, etc.). And even if you were made by accident or by other means, you still do not owe them anything. As you said earlier, “you haven’t asked to be born” therefore why should you repay them for your existence, right?Think of your relationship you build between your parents like a friendship. First, as a infant you get to know the guardian(s) that are “protecting” you from this big world. Little by little, each day that passes by, you get more acquainted with these people and how they fit into your world. Now as you get older, depending on the situations and how these people act towards them with you in it will result if you think you “owe” anything to them, just like friends.For example, if you have a friend and they mistreated you for a period of time, you’re going to move on from the friendship. Do you owe this person anything? Hell No!However, let’s say you have a long time pal. This guy would do you no wrong and would be by your side less than a second. One day, he’s down on his luck and need some cash. Do you owe this long time friend of yours money? No! Yet, you do not hesitate to hand your friend some cash. Why is that? Because he’s a great friend. He has been there for you since day one. This same method should be applied to parents/ guardians. Yes, you did not ask to be born. Yes, you do not owe them anything. But if your parents treated you well off, give you some important life lessons that you’ll never forget and would even put their own lives on the line for you then you would not hesitate to owe them the world.

What is the difference between surname and last name and father name as last name?

Brazilian names are a little different from USA ones. We don’t have the concept of middle name. We usually have personal names that can be only one, or more than one, so we don’t call it first name. If someone asks your “first name” literally, he wants to know your first personal name.And we have surnames (or family names), that are usually two, the first from the mother and the last from the father (the number and the order or the surnames are not mandatory in any sense). But we can have more surnames and we also don’t need to use the parents’ surnames in their children, it’s possible to recover and old family name that get lost some generations ago (like a grandma surname that didn’t passed to their children). So, like the personal name, if we say literally last name, we are talking about the “last surname”. This happens because the most common way to simplify your name in Brazil (when necessary) is to use the first personal name and the last surname. Again, not a rule, and normally people with more than one personal name have a preferred one that it’s the one everybody uses to call him.When couples marry, the tradition is to the woman to keep her last surname (her father’s name) and adopt the husband’s last surname, and those are the names usually passed to the kids. (Not mandatory, wife can keep her name, husband cans adopt wife’s name…)It’s only forbidden to create a new surname or to use a surname not related to the family history.My name is a traditional one:Guilherme (single personal name)Luz (mother’s last surname)Fenerich (father’s last surname).In Brazil it’s also common to identify people first by the first name, after the surname, it’s different from the majority of the western countries.

I didn't ask to be born?

my parents feed and cloth me ok though they seem to have absolutely no expectations of me, and my dad said it's okay i do ordinary things all my life and be a so-so person, making a living just enough the pay the bills...i look at other kids in my school and i seem to be the only one whose parents do not expect much of him and nurture him (music, sports, arts, etc)... the other guys have been trained to be great musicians, sportsmen and artists since kindergarten while i am so airhead. my mom in fact never tells me why she brought me into this world and my dad couldn't care less, i mean he still provides me with everyday necessities but whenever he's free (after work, holidays) he's either out on the streets hanging around or sitting in front of the tv watching live horseracing and soccer matches and bets through the phone every 3 minutes...

i want to ask if they just don't care my future then why did they bring me into the world in the first place?i didn't ask to be born after all?

Should I call myself Chinese or American if I was born in America with a Chinese ancestry?

If  the person asking you is American and you were born, say, in Fremont California, I would say "Fremont California." If they then say "No, where are you really from" I'd say "I was born there. So that's where I'm really from." If they then say "OK, where are your parents from?" I'd tell them. If they then say "So you're Chinese." I'd say "Where are you from?" And they say "Hackensack New Jersey," I'd then say "No, where are you really from?" "I was born there." "Where are your parents from?" "My father's from Macon Georgia and my mother's from Kansas City Missouri." Then I'd say "So you're a Southerner." And so forth. The principle: however the person asking the question seeks to deny your Americanness because of your ancestry, do the same to him. Not aggressively but matter-of-factly. After all, this is what "American" means in 2015:

If your child ever asked "Why did you bring me into the world?” how would you answer?

I'm not a parent. But I'm obliged to answer this question because I asked my parents the same question. Not exactly the same but similar question.I completed my SSC and stood first in my school in SSC ( 10th standard). At that time all I wanted is to do MBBS and become a doctor. I started to study +2 books of BiPC (Biology, Physics & Chemistry) in summer itself. I didn't know anything about life and specially finance in it. So my parents told me that I can't study MBBS as they couldn't support it. They told me to choose Engineering and join in MPC (Mathematics, Physics & Chemistry). Then I started protest. I din't take food in home for days. In every aspect and every conversation I would complain and say things that hurt my parents. Then I would just play cricket all the day and eat at my friend’s. I would come home just to bath and sleep. Then one day this conversation happenedI was about to leave with friends to play cricket.MOM : Son! eat your breakfast and the leave.ME : No. I'm not hungry. I don't want to eat.MOM : What's wrong with you ? Why are you behaving like this?ME : What's wrong with you ? Why don't you get me admission in BiPC ?MOM : Try to understand. We can't afford it.ME : Then why you gave me birth? Did you ask me? I would've been born to rich parents.(By the time my mom was vexed enough with my behavior)MOM : Why were you born to us? Did you ask us?ME : ????? (I was stunned with my mom's question and couldn't say anything)MOM : Then eat your breakfast. (Mom angrily)What could I do ? I ate my breakfast with a question mark face and left to play. Mom's mission is successful to make me eat at home.Later my parents talked to me and convinced me. They are the best counselors who never went to a school.I neither became an engineer nor a doctor but the one that understands finance well.Whatever I am today is my parents blessings and sacrifice. I still feel guilty for my behavior at that time.It's difficult for us as kids to comprehend and understand the world. We owe forever to our parents for their love, patience and sacrifice. Nothing equals parents love.Anonymous because I feel guilty even now.

How to keep the father off birth certificate?

I did it. When the registrar was asking me the parental information, she asked me the father's name and I said, "I'd like to keep that ommitted." She said okay. No harm, no foul.

You are not obligated to list the parental information. She could legitimately not know who the father is. They can't fault her for that.

With that said, if she wants to get child support from him, they will make him take a paternity test. THEN, he can fight to have the name on the BC, and then a custody battle could ensue if he is a big a jerk as you're saying. If she isn't worried about financial support in helping to raise her child, then there is no worries on this.

The best thing to do, for Mom and Baby, is to keep a restraining order in play and/or a PFA (Protection From Abuse Order) and she needs to document any and all contact from him. If he knows that she's pregnant, she needs to do this for their safety. Men that crazy are even crazier when there's a child involved.

I'm not trying to scare either of you. I just know first-hand what can happen. My daughter's father isn't on the BC. He wasn't abusive, but he has a serious drinking problem. She has my maiden name. He pays child support (sometimes) but has no custody of her at all. It's because I documented and had evidence when we went to court for that part. I have also worked at a battered-womens shelter, and have helped shelter participants in obtaining these orders.

Good luck to you and your friend. I hope this info is useful.

Please help on My English Paper. (I am Italian)?

Hello. I am Marcella Migliorini. I was born in Italy in 1994. My father is Henry and my mother is Marcella. We currently Italy. My mother is a seamstress and my father is a politician. I asked for a cell phone for the holidays. When I grow older, I wish to be a pharmacist. I am arranging to get married to Charlie Vespucci when I am seventeen. I cannot wait for the day that I marry Charlie. Charlie has a brother named Gifford, he is not very tall.

Have changed a bit, but it was still good for someone who is learning english. I hope it is ok

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