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Re: Citizen - adjective for Nationality?
From: |
MJ Ray |
Subject: |
Re: Citizen - adjective for Nationality? |
Date: |
Wed, 02 Jan 2008 19:33:02 +0000 |
User-agent: |
Heirloom mailx 12.2 01/07/07 |
Chris McGinlay <address@hidden> wrote: [...]
> For example, my nationality is British in the sense that I am a British
> person. [...]
I have a UK passport and I'm English, but I don't call myself British.
I know this is a wider problem, but there are other places it's going
to get more hotly disputed - is there a reason to limit it to the ISO
vocab?
Regards,
--
MJ Ray http://mjr.towers.org.uk/email.html tel:+44-844-4437-237 -
Webmaster-developer, statistician, sysadmin, online shop builder,
consumer and workers co-operative member http://www.ttllp.co.uk/ -
Writing on koha, debian, sat TV, Kewstoke http://mjr.towers.org.uk/
- Re: Citizen - adjective for Nationality?,
MJ Ray <=
- Re: ISO nationalities, Davi Leal, 2008/01/02
- Re: ISO nationalities, MJ Ray, 2008/01/03
- Re: (1) ISO nationalities, (2) License to work at, (3) Others comments, Davi Leal, 2008/01/05
- Re: (1) ISO nationalities, (2) License to work at, (3) Others comments, MJ Ray, 2008/01/05
- Re: (1) ISO nationalities, (2) License to work at, (3) Other comments/Description, Davi Leal, 2008/01/05
- Re: (1) ISO nationalities, (2) License to work at, Davi Leal, 2008/01/13
- Re: (1) ISO nationalities, (2) License to work at, Davi Leal, 2008/01/13