No, the term limit for a president is two terms.
A president can be elected for two terms of four years. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was president of the United States for twelve years, because the country didn't want to elect a new president during the war and the Great Depression of 1929.
They are elected to four-year terms. The President can be re-elected one time. There are no restrictions on the number of vice-presidential terms.
A person might serve for any number of terms as vice president and still be elected to two terms as president.
Grover Cleveland http://www.patriotstoolbox.org/america/presidents/groovercleveland.htm
they can be elected.
Grover Cleveland was elected president two nonconsective terms to be America's 22nd and 24th president!!!!!
Woodrow Wilson was the first Democrat to be elected President for two consecutive terms after Andrew Jackson. In between the two, Democrat Grover Cleveland was President twice, but he was not elected to two consecutive terms.
Ulysses S. Grant was elected in 1868. He served two terms as the 18th President.
The president is elected for a four-year term. They can only be elected twice.
A President can be elected to two terms. It does not matter if the terms are directly sequential (back to back) or not. And it's probably good for the president to wear a tie too!
No, US Presidents can only serve 2 terms, even if unconsecutively.