ANSWERS: 5
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The Netherlands
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denemark
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That's called "Jus Soli". The following countries have it as law: * American Samoa[2][3] (birth in American Samoa renders American Samoan and U.S. nationalities, but no birthright to U.S. citizenship) * Antigua and Barbuda * Argentina * Azerbaijan[4] * Barbados * Belize * Bolivia * Brazil * Canada * Chile[5] (children of transient foreigners or of foreign diplomats on assignment in Chile only upon request) * Colombia * Dominica * Dominican Republic * Ecuador * El Salvador * Fiji[6] * Grenada * Guatemala * Guyana * Honduras * Jamaica * Lesotho[7] * Mexico * Nicaragua * Pakistan * Panama * Paraguay * Peru * Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic[8] * Saint Christopher and Nevis * Saint Lucia * Saint Vincent and the Grenadines * Trinidad and Tobago * Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus * United States * Uruguay * Venezuela
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The UK.
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You don't get nationality, you get a citizenship. A nationality you earn by being raised in a certain country or around certain people (like off on a U.S. base in Germany in a predominantly American environment). As far as citizenship by birth, I know the U.S. is one of those countries, and is the most fanatical about it (like you can't be President if you're not natural born)
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