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I Want To Move To England / London Help

I want to move to England when i turn 18 (HELP)?

No in London... Londoners hate everyone and its is also bloody expensive to get accommodation there.

1.) Yes it is a reasonable goal its something you enjoy and Britain has some really good culinary schools.
2.) Research the costs of your average flat in locations you like and remember our money is worth more than yours so if you have $1000 you're only going to get about £611 back for it so you'll need more. Also land isn't as cheap as it is in the states over here.
3.) Lots of good and the most well known schools are in London but here is a list of good ones by a UK paper http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/...
4.) Major changes you can expect is rain and lots of it. Also as previously mentioned things in the UK aren't cheap
5.) The chances for someone your age getting a visa isn't that good but it isn't impossible its still achievable just do lots of research on the UK etc.

Which place in england can i move to where its near london(but not in london) & near an international airport?

i want to buy a house where an airport is just a few minutes away and london is also accessible. i also need it to be near a hospital. is an estate agent able to help me with this problem?

Should i move to london, england ?

It has its good and bad points.
It's very busy, has good public transport, good places to visit, and for some, good jobs.
The nightlife is great, with a wealth of theatres, restaurants and clubs, as indeed is the list of things to do in the day.
www.visitlondon.com (or similar) should give you an idea about the place, but it is horrendously expensive to live there, and the suburbs can be quite horrible places despite their old reputations.
I only ever lived in south London - about 10 miles out of town, but nowadays would consider it too close.

Why did Dracula want to move to England?

Because London was one big All-You-Can-Drink buffet.In his home, he was an ancient and well-known evil, and the citizenry knew enough about his habits and strengths and weaknesses to take measures to protect themselves.In London, he could melt into the masses and prowl to his heart’s content. They would not suspect him for a long, long time. Instead of a wary peasantry, there were thousands upon thousands of poor people whose lives were already so perilous that their deaths would not be investigated thoroughly.And should the authorities become too suspicious and close in on him, he could move on to another big city. London was a hub of industrialization and trade, so the world was his.He didn’t care about creating other vampires (or rather there’s no indication of that in the book). He liked to turn women out of spite or as a warning, but he left his three brides back in Transylvania to fend for themselves. And he certainly didn’t turn men; he used them and killed them as suited his needs. Stoker’s Drac is a supremely solitary and selfish creature.The novel reflects the societal anxieties of its time: Drac represents the fear of the foreigner from the East seeping into Western culture like a virus, infecting it silently. As England sent its long hooks of imperialism into the world, seeking resources for its factories and taking them whether or not the indigenous people objected, the question arose: what contagion might we awaken?

Moving to London after high school?

Ignore Derek's advice about the student visa - if you want citizenship in the UK, a student visa is not the route. Student visas are designed to be temporary, you are expected to leave once your course is completed & time spent in the UK on a student visa does not qualify towards the eligibility period for permanent residence or citizenship, only a work visa counts. The Post Graduate Work visas have also been curtailed.

Derek is however right about entering the UK as a tourist, if you enter the UK as a tourist, you leave as a tourist. You cannot change your status once you're in the UK, you cannot search for work as a tourist even if you did attempt to search for work, an employer can't interview you & you won't qualify for a work visa.


As an American citizen you will require a visa to live & work in the UK - work visas are only available to those who fall into the highly skilled or talented category, they're looking for people with a minimum of a University degree (or a masters depending on who you speak to) who work in fields like law, medicine, IT, engineering etc

At the age of 18 with only a high school education behind you you fall into the unskilled category & won't qualify for a work visa.

The only way around the visa is if you can claim citizenship of an EU member state.

Your sister is right, if you want to live & work in the UK you need to go to college, get a degree & build up some experience in your chosen field.

If i move to England will i get an accent?

You will probally pick up bits of the english accent on specific words but I don't think your current accent will change much unless you try to make it change. People move around in country and don't lose the accent from where they grew up.

I am 14 years old and I want to move to England permanently in the future, what steps should I do now so that I can immigrate there?

As other answers say, you really should visit a country before you even think of living there to see how it really is.Really the best thing you can do in your youth at will make it easier to move is to get good grades in high school, and then apply and get accepted to a British university instead of an American university.For most countries, the two easiest ways to get residency are to go to college there and get a degree, or marry a citizen of that country.As for visiting there, I recently had a “I am glad I visited the country first” moment when I went to Japan with my little brother. I had previously considered maybe going to Japan for a year with my girlfriend and teaching English.Under no circumstances to I ever want to find myself in Japan again for more than 2 weeks. I would have absolutely hated living there for a year. Everything from the weather to the pancakes covered in tartar sauce, to the walled off beaches that prevent me from swimming even though the water is nice and warm, to the 200+$ expressway tolls just to travel a few hundred miles, made me not want to find myself there for a long period of time… ever again.Even little things like all the buildings being built right up to the street started to bug me.So yes, visit the UK first.Out of all the countries I have ever been to, I could live in Australia, Canada, the Netherlands, Germany, or maybe Poland, France or Belgium if I had to, hell maybe even Costa Rica but I would never want to live in Mexico, Cambodia, Japan, Jamaica, Belize, or South Korea. At least from what I have seen while visiting those countries.Lots of Americans have a grass is greener on the other side point of view about western Europe because many educated Americans and leftwing Americans admire things like universal healthcare and limited military spending, but every country really has its own issues, some better than others. Germany for example has universal healthcare, but much higher unemployment and homelessness than the US.

I want to move to the UK...?

My husband and I along with our two young children are thinking about moving from the US to the UK in a few years. We have enjoyed the idea of living in the countryside or a small village for many, many years. We are looking for a much more quiet way of life and only a small, very modest home. We really are just looking for more peace and a simpler life. I was wondering if anyone had any advice on how to do this. We have a student loan, mortgage and other debts that amount to about $120,000. We could sell our home, pay off our debts and maybe make $10,000. My husband has no degrees, while I have a bachelors in Art Education. I'm not sure it would be possible for us to find good jobs before we ran out of money. I really want to consider this. Can anyone tell me a place we could afford to move into that is safe and quiet? Also, how feasible is this notion? Is it possible for us to make this move given our financial, skills, family situation? Neither of us have ever been convicted of a crime, so I don't think passports/visas would be an issue. Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you in advance.

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