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So your child will be Irish.mirzhar wrote:we are living in Southern Ireland , We moved here 3 yrs ago and since then we have settle down here
With respect, it should matter to you what nationality your baby has.mirzhar wrote:my wife got her citizenship because of her mother was british citizen
They been living long in UK . Thats all i know abt how they got citizenship
well it really doesnt matter for us even my baby will be irish or british
No it doesn't. The OP says the baby will be born in Ireland. No ambiguity there. The child will either be also British by decent or not British at all.Obie wrote:Just to add, depending on which part of Ireland your wife will be having the baby, the child could still possibly claim an automatic right to citizenship of both countries.
Certainly Irish, possibly others. You do not let us answer properly as you are not providing the information asked.mirzhar wrote:thanks everyone for reply
but answer of my question is still not clear yet ?
I have Eufam4 my wife is british
what will be my child born in ireland will have nationallity
? Irish or british
Actually there is ambiguity, because the Island of ireland , is made of the Republic of Ireland and the 6 counties or Northern Ireland as it is called.Ben wrote:No it doesn't. The OP says the baby will be born in Ireland. No ambiguity there. The child will either be also British by decent or not British at all.Obie wrote:Just to add, depending on which part of Ireland your wife will be having the baby, the child could still possibly claim an automatic right to citizenship of both countries.
Obie. The OP said the child is to be born in Ireland. That is the name of the state. 'Republic of Ireland' is merely a description of the state of Ireland and is not the name, as you seem to infer.Obie wrote:Actually there is ambiguity, because the Island of ireland , is made of the Republic of Ireland and the 6 counties or Northern Ireland as it is called.Ben wrote:No it doesn't. The OP says the baby will be born in Ireland. No ambiguity there. The child will either be also British by decent or not British at all.Obie wrote:Just to add, depending on which part of Ireland your wife will be having the baby, the child could still possibly claim an automatic right to citizenship of both countries.
Had the OP said Republic of Ireland, then there would not have been any ambiguity.
My sister lived with us in a county that borders Newry, and choose to have her child in Newry, and hence the child was able to secure the citizenship of Both UK and Ireland, without the need to probe the circumstance surrounding the acquisitation of her British nationality
Eire = Ireland. Different language, same meaning. In normal English usage, the term "Ireland" usually refers to the Republic of Ireland UNLESS the context is such that it is a reference to the whole island. Usually it's better to use the term "Republic of Ireland" to avoid ambiguity.Obie wrote:My understanding is EIRE is more or less the southern bit of Ireland which is the state.
The english version is Ireland, but it cannot be inferred that the specific scope of EIRE is similar to that of Ireland, which without further clarification could cover the whole of the Island of Ireland.
Ireland in my view refers to the whole Island of Ireland, without and specific, whiles EIRE refers to the whole of Ireland and the Soverign state of Ireland.