An American citizen may lose their citizenship through a process known as expatriation, which can occur if they voluntarily choose to renounce their citizenship, typically by making a formal declaration before a U.S. consulate. Additionally, citizenship may be revoked if an individual is found to have obtained it through fraud or misrepresentation. Engaging in certain actions such as serving in a foreign military or taking an oath of allegiance to Another Country can also lead to loss of citizenship, although these cases are less common.
Have you applied & received citizenship or were you born in America? Then you would be an American Citizen.
I would report them to the authorities.
If you live in the United States, your nationality is typically American. However, nationality can also refer to the country where you hold citizenship. If you are a citizen of the US, you would identify as American; if you are a citizen of another country but reside in the US, your nationality would be that of your country of citizenship.
According to American law, if one or both of the parents are American citizens, the child is also an American citizen. If the child is also eligible for Chinese citizenship (such as one parent being a Chinese citizen), at a certain age the child will be asked to choose citizenship of one country or the other.
Duel citizenship is not forbidden in the United States. There is no reason that this would be impossible. Wikipedia has a page on that (United_States_nationality_law#Dual_citizenship)
No,she would get neither one. The child would be the one to reap the benefits and be a American Citizen.
An American can lose citizenship for varying reasons. Some of these reasons include being convicted for treason, voluntarily renouncing U.S. citizenship and obtaining naturalization in a foreign state.
I believe that you're guaranteed a citizenship when you marry a citizen, but being an illegal complicates the matter.
The child would have dual citizenship; Canadian and American.
No. The spouse would have to naturalize in France to become a french citizen. Children of this couple, who are born in the US, are dual French-US citizens at birth. The process for "recognizing" french citizenship is complicated, however.
a person who was not an american a birth but who has since gained american citizenship
If you are a dual citizen, your nationality would be both of the countries you hold citizenship in.