In at least one state yes. Call the marriage license office where you want to get married to see if it is legal there.
But consider the consequences if you are going to have children. Ask a medical professional about the potential issues both with conceiving and birth defects your children may have.
By law it is fine to marry your second cousin. This is considered the closest relationship where any offspring may be born without any closer relationship mental or physical problems.
Yes, you can if one of you is male and the other is female. Even marriages between first cousins is legal, and not uncommon in some ethnic groups.
This is something that is entirely up to you. If you feel right doing it, then yes.
No thats your cousin and shes your blood. So it is not morally right to marry your cousin.
NO! That would be the children of your mother or father's cousin, right? So you would have the same great-grandparents? Too close! Too many possibilities of recessive traits in that gene pool...
Yes, your cousin once removed was your cousin by marriage and was remove by a divorce. Technically she's not really related to you.
yes of course
How the estate is handled depends on the laws of the jurisdiction in which it is probated.
He was second of kin to her.
not at all, but sometimes it is what it is
i should be able to because if needed i can always move and marry in another state right?
No. That's insest, find a different women, there's millions.
Many people believe it is not right to marry a cousin. Others think it quite acceptable. There are potential issues of genetic diseases for the offspring of cousin marriages, especially if the cousins are closely related. Genetic counseling might be advisable beforehand.
In the United States, our kinship system does not have a separate word to refer to the spouse of a cousin, so on that basis you can argue that someone who marries your cousin is not "related" to you. However, in a sense you *are* related to that person, especially if you have regular or close contact with your cousin and his or her spouse, so you can choose to refer to the spouse as a cousin if you want to create a greater or inclusive sense of family.