what is difference between a nation and nationality
justice2:
nation is a noun while nationlity is adjective
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Answered by
9
Nationalityhas a formal or legal meaning, citizenship of a state (in the international, not the US, sense). Citizen ofCanada, nationality Canadian; citizen of France, nationality French.It is sometimes used more loosely to refer to a persons “ethnicity” or cultural identity, although quite what that means is itself open to debate. But, for instance, a UK citizen(born or naturalised) might identify as French or Indian or Jamaican because that is where their forebears came from. Many US citizens identify as <nationality>-American (Irish-, Italian-, German-, and so on), although the last member of their family that was legally <nationality> arrived in 1848.Nationhas a similar nuance to that second sense of nationality, but refers to an ethnic identity as agrouprather than as anattribute. Perhaps the commonest use in this sense is referring to North American aboriginal peoples as “First
Nations” (in Canada, whereas I believe in the USA the more usual term is “Native Americans”). It is also possible to referto the Scottish, Welsh or English “nation”, although this is rare and has contentious overtones.Nation can also be used as a substitute for “country” or “state” (again, not in the US sense). It is not, however, as well defined as nationalityin the formal sense, in so far as a nation may not necessarily coincide with a legal sovereign state. Some sovereign states consist almostexclusively of a single ethnic group (often called “nation-states”); examples include Japan and Hungary.Many states now andin the past explicitly encompass multiple “nations”, such as theAustro-Hungarian Empire. Others are in reality multi-ethnic, but are presented as a unified nation by some dominant or majority community. Modern examples of this situation abound,but are politically very contentious so I will refrain from listing them.
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Nations” (in Canada, whereas I believe in the USA the more usual term is “Native Americans”). It is also possible to referto the Scottish, Welsh or English “nation”, although this is rare and has contentious overtones.Nation can also be used as a substitute for “country” or “state” (again, not in the US sense). It is not, however, as well defined as nationalityin the formal sense, in so far as a nation may not necessarily coincide with a legal sovereign state. Some sovereign states consist almostexclusively of a single ethnic group (often called “nation-states”); examples include Japan and Hungary.Many states now andin the past explicitly encompass multiple “nations”, such as theAustro-Hungarian Empire. Others are in reality multi-ethnic, but are presented as a unified nation by some dominant or majority community. Modern examples of this situation abound,but are politically very contentious so I will refrain from listing them.
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Answered by
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concept of national and nationality extremely difficult to define according to one important view.A nation is a sovereign people A voluntary civil community of equal citizens:a nation is an ethnic community bound by common language ,culture and ancistry
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