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| Expert | Average Ratings | Expertise |
|---|---|---|
Roy Helge RasmussenNorway
Available
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I live in the southern part of norway and can find my way around most of the country. I will answer questions about social life, culture, language and politics to the best of my knowledge. I am not so good at travel tips outside the south-eastern parts, although I will try to answer. | |
Louis JanusU.S.
Available
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Norwegian language -- norsk språk |
If you have a permanent residence permit from the UK and you do have an engineering degree it isn't all that unlikely that you could find a job in norway. If your residency is still bound to your current
Kåre is pronounced "Core-Eh", but with a spanish rolling R. Fuglseth is pronounced "Foog-L-Set" with high-low-high tone and with emphasis on the first syllable. Or if that is to difficult: Foog-el-set
There are three sides to this. What can be done and what is legal - and where what is legal. It is illegal for a norwegian citizen to hold dual citizenship. A child can hold dual citizenship until the
Eide is an ancient name meaning wading point / strait /narrows. The place you can wade over the river, where there is a bridge or where you can walk across the narrows. Holven is also a very old name
The base rule is that you whall pay taxes in the country of residence, for all your income. But when the income (interest) is generated in a country that tax this as normal income - then you can deduct

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