It is called a single-parent household.
single-parent family
If only one parent is living=- for example if the Mother had died in childbirth but the child survived, yes, this would be legitimate.
A lone parent family is one in which there is only one parent. In lone parent family either there is the mother or the father. In lone parent family, one parent act as mother and father both .
A single parent family is a type of family with only one parent present with either a blood related child/children or an adopted one.
A family with only one parent - normally a single woman with one or more children. It could also be a father with a child or more children.
A family with only one parent - normally a single woman with one or more children. It could also be a father with a child or more children.
William Paul Carter has written: 'The only child in the family' -- subject(s): Child development, Child psychology, Only child, Parent and child
Only if approved by the court
Only if the child is severely handicapped.
Only if there is a court order to that affect. If not, the non-custodial parent should visit the local family court and inquire about filing a proper complaint for shared custody.
a small family is when you dont have a lot of family members. examples:- an only child, grew up with one parent.
Not really. The child of two married individuals is legally considered to be the child of both spouses. If the child is beyond the age at which the parents have legal responsibility for him/her, the legality of paternity is almost entirely irrelevant. If is mostly just a social/family issue. The parent can refuse to see the child, refuse to speak to the child, etc. The only remaining legal detail is writing the child out of the parents will, living will, etc., so that the child cannot make end-of-life decisions for the parent or inherit any of the parent's estate.
No, a child adult cannot do this. This has to be done when the child is under the age of 18 years old. But the child can't sue. It has to be done by the child's parent against the other parent in family court. Also depends on what state the child lives in. Family law varies from state to state.