Certainly, in most countries. You and she are not biologically related.
Some religions and ethnic groups may assign a family relationship, even after the dissolution of your first marriage, and a few countries may incorporate such views into law, so you will need to assess the laws of the country where you live and the views of the culture in which you live.
The term "niece in law" is without meaning. Presumably, you mean the daughter of your wife, or in this case, the daughter of your ex-wife.
You never were biologically related so you could legally marry as long as you are not now married to someone else.
So, you can if you want to and she agrees, and if you are willing to deal with any disapproval that may come from either family based on cultural norms you may be bending.
The term "half-niece" has no widely accepted standard meaning.
You niece is either the daughter of your sibling, in which case most jurisdictions do not permit marriage, or the daughter of your spouse's sibling, in which case you have no biological relationship but since you are already married a further marriage is not permitted except in certain Islamic countries.
Legally, you can, if you are no longer married to your wife - but it will make family dinners pretty awkward.
no it's not legal to marry a relative
No, it can't be. My uncle can't marry my younger sister because both are related by blood. Everywhere, there are many rules and regulations against them. This is an incest and cause genetical disorders and pedigree collapse. Noneover the world, these marriages are allowed, eventhough many foolish girls in South India marry their maternal uncle and got arrested and killed.
yes
If the marriage was legal under the laws of the state in which it was conducted, it is legal in ALL states.
The niece could be the daughter of the sister-in-law's sibling and not related to you, so you could marry her. However, the niece could also be your mother or your aunt, in which case you could not marry her. Erm, but whover readwhat this guy just wrote, I expect you're wondering WHY WOULD YOU EVEN BOTHER? DON'T YOU HAVE ANYTHING BETTER TO DO??
No.
If you marry him maybe.
No
The site stripped the parentheses from the question. It should read: "What is the technical term for the familial relationship you'd have with your half-niece's (daughter of half-brother) son?" Your half-niece is your half-sibling's daughter. So what is the term for your half-niece's daughter, in relation to you? My first best guess would be "half-grandniece", but that doesn't sound right to me, and I guess it with absolutely zero authority. Hopefully someone can give the correct answer.
No. A niece or nephew cannot be claimed as a dependent unless the aunt is their legal guardian.No. A niece or nephew cannot be claimed as a dependent unless the aunt is their legal guardian.No. A niece or nephew cannot be claimed as a dependent unless the aunt is their legal guardian.No. A niece or nephew cannot be claimed as a dependent unless the aunt is their legal guardian.
If you marry your girlfriend, you niece (daughter of your brother or sister) will continue to be your niece and will also be considered by most to be your new wife's niece. Your new wife will be her aunt, as you are already her uncle.
He could not find another wife.
Yes. He had one biological child (Hailey), one niece which he adopted (Alaina), and also a half-brother which he is the legal guardian of (Nathan).