Short answer............NO.
You have to apply for and be granted Permanent Resident status, which used to be called Landed Immigrant. Marriage is not a gurantee that you will be given PR status. You have to pass the requirements as if you were just another applicant, from anywhere in the world.
You will need a complete history of your life from the day you were born, along with business and personal refferences , a clean criminal record ( no felonies at all) a clean medical examination, ( no aids/hiv ) and your education and employment history ( the higher your education level the better).Most applicants for PR status have at least a Bachelor's degree, and many have a Master's, or a advanced technical trade certificate.
The process takes about a year to be completed, and you will have to attend a number of interviews before you are accepted for PR status. The fees are non-refundable, if you are rejected.
Unfortunately no.
No it does not make him a citizen, but it you may sponser him for citizenship if you wish.
He's considered her "fiance"
Fiancee
FIANCEE
no
Save yourself a very big headache. DO NOT get married on a visa waiver. It is considered immigration fraud because you will have immigrant intent. You may not be able to get a greencard, especially if the INS decides that you knew you were going to get married when you got on the plane. Have your fiancee file for the K-1 fiancee visa. It will take a few months, but what are a few months when you're going to be together 'till death? The K-1 would give you 90 days to get married after your entry to the US.
Fiancee is feminine and fiance is masculine
I am so glad to be his fiancee.
A fiancee is the person that someone is engaged to, meaning they are going to marry him/her. For example, "My fiancee got me a beautiful ring".
The equivalent for the word "fiancee" in Tagalog language are "nobya", and "kasintahan".
The plural of fiancee is fiancees.