No. If you are a green card holder for a minimum period of 5 years and above the age of 18 you need to file the Immigration Form N-400 to file for citizenship processing and the process is called naturalization.
no you do not, as long as you have a birth certificate showing you were born in the United States or you have documentation that supports you have become a US citizen a green card in unnecessary.
No. They are only Permanent Residents, a distinct legal class of person from Citizens.
No, it means they are permanent legal residents.
yes it is a temp/perm citizenship
For immigrating to the US and getting a green card: Yes.For obtaining US citizenship: No.
She can get US citizenship right after the marriage. You'll have to get her a fiance visa and start the immigration process. After obtaining her green card (which usually takes about 2 years), she needs to live in the US for an additional 3 years. Then she can apply for US citizenship.
No, it is not mandatory for green card holders to posses a machine readable passport (as the green card is machine readable).
No. The green card should have minimum six months validity before you can apply for US citizenship. If green card is about to expire you need to apply for its renewal first and then apply for US citizenship.
No - a Green card means your a permanent legal resident. ESTA is only used for Visa holders and waivers
Being pregnant by a US citizen won't get you a citizenship. If you are married to a US citizen and have filled for permanent resident and got your green card and after your first green card for 2 years you have to apply for your second green card, but for citizenship you can apply after 2 yrs and 9 months from first green card.
Yes, they can.
Absolutely not.This is because of the fact that people who temporarily live in the US and green card holders also have a Social Security Card. You should present a valid passport if you want to travel to Canada.
You may be able to obtain a passport from your country of citizenship, but not from the country that has issued you a green card: passports identify and verify citizenship. Visit your country's consulate if you're not living in your country of citizenship, or the passport office in your country of citizenship to verify your rights to a passport. It will be important to disclose that you are holding a green card from another country.
Not required because only after you hand over your green card at the time of oath taking for US citizenship you are given the citizenship certificate.
If a person from a foreign country obtains citizenship legally, they are a legal citizen of the United States. Former marriages for the purpose of obtaining a green card would have no bearing on this.