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National Titles
Quote from
Qoztek on March 19, 2025, 1:26 pm
A national is one who is not under the submission of the federal government.
I think it sounds strange to call it just a "national" with no other titles. I mean, it sounds like an adjective!
Would it be correct to refer to nationals as any of these: American national, state citizen (was this the old term?), citizen of Texas (or the name of a state)?
Or are there other options?
Maybe you wouldn't use these in court or in a document, but in more casual settings?
A national is one who is not under the submission of the federal government.
I think it sounds strange to call it just a "national" with no other titles. I mean, it sounds like an adjective!
Would it be correct to refer to nationals as any of these: American national, state citizen (was this the old term?), citizen of Texas (or the name of a state)?
Or are there other options?
Maybe you wouldn't use these in court or in a document, but in more casual settings?
Quote from
David on March 19, 2025, 3:51 pm
You can find "national" and "American national" in U.S. code. These can be considered statutory terms. Whereas other titles are generally nonstatutory or colloquial in nature.
You can find "national" and "American national" in U.S. code. These can be considered statutory terms. Whereas other titles are generally nonstatutory or colloquial in nature.
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