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Yes you can.
You need to apply for a permanent residency status. Go to INS or call them to get the application. It is a process that will take about 6 months to a year. After living in the US for 3 years as Permanent Resident your spouse can apply for US citizenship.
You only have to live in Arizona for 6 weeks to be considered a resident. If you have a home and receive mail there, you are considered a resident.
Possibly, assuming your permanent residence status was granted due to your marriage to a US citizen or foreign national who also is a permanent resident.
no when I become 99 yrs old dumbo
If the marriage is found to be valid it takes a minimum of 6-18 months to obtain permanent residence status (green card). The parties must remain legally married and residing together for three years before the immigrant can apply for US citizenship. Persons who are in the US illegally are not eligible for permanent resident status and citizenship even if they marry a US citizen.
If your legal resident status was obtained through marriage to a US citizen, you can apply for citizenship as early as 2 years and 9 months after you were granted permanent residency. If your legal resident status was obtained through means other than marriage to a US citizen, you may apply as early as 4 years and 9 months after you were granted permanent residency. Once you apply, it takes between 6 and 9 months to process.
It depends on the country. A number of months is common.
Maybe. The devil is in the details.You would (probably) have to apply for permanent resident status, since visitors are usually only allowed to stay for 6 months. You could apply to have your stay extended, but what you want is really closer to "permanent resident" anyway. To keep permanent resident status you have to actually live in Canada for at least two years out of 5, which doesn't sound like it would be a problem for you.You really should contact the Canadian immigration office for specifics, because they're the only people who can actually guarantee that their answer is definitive.
living somewhere for 6 months makes you a state resident by law, we reside wherever we live living somewhere for 6 months makes you a state resident by law, we reside wherever we live living somewhere for 6 months makes you a state resident by law, we reside wherever we live living somewhere for 6 months makes you a state resident by law, we reside wherever we live living somewhere for 6 months makes you a state resident by law, we reside wherever we live
No, you must have a permanent resident card that does not expire within the next six (6) months, you can not be here on a work or school visa.
No it doesn't when you first get it done but after months it will start fading but its a long time before that happens : DD