No. A 17-year-old is a minor and is subject to the control and authority of their parents unless they have been emancipated.
18, or 16 with emancipation.
Not without parents permission or emancipation by the court.
If you have parents permission, you don't have emancipation cause. Emancipation means being freed from bondage or imprisonment - with permissions being given, one is certainly not being held against their will. The other view possibly here is that the parents do not want to accept responsibility for your being once you leave their home.
You have to sue your parents in court to gain emancipation.
No. Pregnancy does not confer emancipation.
You have to options, the first is to get the parents' permission. The second is to file for emancipation if it is allowed in your state.
A minor under the age of 18 cannot move out of the house with her parents' permission. The child may file for emancipation in order to be able to move out.
If she is legally married, yes. If she is emancipated, yes. If she has her parents' permission, yes. If she doesn't have her parents' permission, no, but she can apply for emancipation.
You can, but only if you are at the emancipation age required by your particular state.
If you live in the US... You'd have to get your parents permission, but even then, they are still legally responsible for you.
In most cases, yes, a minor needs parental permission to get emancipated. Emancipation is a legal process where a minor becomes self-supporting and takes on adult responsibilities. Parents typically need to consent or be notified before a minor can be granted emancipation by the court.
Either with her parents permission or seek emancipation with the court. Emancipation takes time though and by the time it's done you might already be 18 and can do what you want.