Regardless of what kind of cousin you are talking about (first, second, fifth, once removed, thrice removed, etc.) your cousin's husband is not related to you. If you need to refer to him other than by name, you can call him "my cousin's husband" or "my uncle's son-in-law."
I think it would be cousin in law your husband's cousin, silly goose!
Nothing. They are your cousin's husband, but there is no relationship between the two of you. You do not share (usually!) a common ancestor.
If your cousin is married, his wife is "your cousin's wife." The English language has no specific term or name for the spouse of a cousin.
That would probably be your cousin-in-law.
In genealogy terms she would be "spouse of your first cousin."
There is no connection. They share no common ancestors. In introductions, he would be referred to has her cousin's husband.
You are not related to your husband's cousins.
he would be your cousin in law *once removed*. "Once removed" is a term for cousins who are separated by a generation, such as your mom's cousin is to you(and also her husband to you as well). Technically, you all are "first-cousins"(even with the removals), but you and your mom's cousin's children would be second-cousins, just fyi :)
The granddaughter is the niece's first cousin once removed.
They would be first cousins.
No.
No relation...lol
Yes. If your husband's cousin is his first cousin, the cousin's daughters and your children are second cousins to each other. If your husband's cousin is his second cousin, the children are third cousins to each other.
I would not think so. It will depend how you look at it
They are out of synch to a common ancestor by one generation. That would make the first cousins once removed.