If you get caught by the police yes.
By giving false or fraud information, your license would be cancelled
You will be charged with "driving without a license" and hopefully have your permit revoked and be unable to get your license for a period of time determined by the court.
The answer depends on the state in which you live. In California the penalty for driving without a license that has been revoked is a minimum of 5 days in jail for the first offense, Veh. Code 14601
Your CDL IS your license. If your CDL gets yanked, you don't retain a regular drivers license - you're revoked, period.
Drivingt without a learners permit, and without a license, would constitute 'driving without a license' which is a misdemeanor offense.
The Minnesota Department of Public Safety does not use a point system for driver citations. If you are driving without insurance, your license can be suspended, revoked or canceled.
Under Ontario law, driving without a license can be punished by fines and even prison time. This varies depending on why the license is suspended or revoked and what the driver does while driving without a license. If a person is injured or killed by an unlicensed driver, that driver can face life in prison.
In most states, the first instance of driving without a license (you have none, or it is revoked) is a misdemeanor, subject to a fine. Subsequent offenses can carry various terms of imprisonment of 30 to 90 days in jail. In any case, anyone driving on a revoked license will normally be arrested, booked, and arraigned, subject to the applicable bail laws.
It depends upon why you license is revoked and the county. Lets say a bad case scenario is that you are revoked for multiple DUI's and the offense occurs in Waukesha County. You can expect to be convicted of a misdemeanor, fined over $1000 and spend probably a month or so in huber.
Depending on the state laws in your state, you can receive a pricey ticket, have your drivers license revoked, have your car impounded, have your tag revoked, have your registration cancelled and these are just assuming you didn't get involved in an accident. If you were in an accident that's another long list.
Yes, your felon status does not apply. If you can prove to a judge that being without a drivers license will cause a financial hardship (such as preventing you from having transportation to and from work, meeting parental responsibilities, etc) then the judge may feel inclined to give you restricted driving privileges. Note, that the judge does not have to reinstate your license under any means.
No