There is no specific law as of such that says you can renounce your parents. Since it is biological parents or children cannot renounce each other. But still they can go to law if something is against the law and the law decides.
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.
If the grandparents have had custody the parents of the child have to pay them child support. If you by child care mean daycare that is also the parents who pay for that.
Is that between a child's parents? if so it is ultimately up to the parents. But, most parents will let the child decide who they want to live with.
parents teaches the child cultures supplies food,clothin and shelter
Parents have the right to make a child move out after he attains 18 years of age.
Parents should renounce their citizenship so that the child's citizenship can be given up as well. You cannot apply on behalf of a minor nor he or she can do it unless they have reached the age of majority. * This is for countries that allow their citizens to renounce their citizenship; some have complicated regulations, taxes, compulsory military service, or they just won't let you do that at all.
Despite the pleadings and protestations of her parents, Deborah refused to renounce her love for the leader of the motorcycle gang.
Catholics renounce Satan when they are baptized, if they are too young to do this, then their parents and sponsors renounce Satan for them.
majority
Children "succeed" to the rights and obligations of their parents. That means simply that they take on whatever the parents owned and owed. They may renounce the succession. But by doing so the renounce both what the parents owned as well as what they owned. Bottom line: You want mama and daddy's house and bank account? You gotta take mama and daddy's debts along with it.
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.
A christening is usually a ceremony where a child is welcomed into the Christian church, where their name is given and Godparents and parents take on the responsibility of bringing the child up as a Christian, and renounce sin and Satan on the child's behalf. Water is poured on the child and blessings are laid on them. Afterwards the child is considered part of God's family, part of the church, although they will have to be confirmed (affirm that they believe in Christ) at a later stage.
The parents who are narrow minded & who always oppose their child's dreams are donkey parents. All parents love their child, but if parents will give respect to child then child will always give them respect.
A child with no parents is called an orphan. If they are taken in by foster parents, they are orphaned, or they could be put into an orphanage.So to answer your question, a child with no parents is called an orphan.
The child can go with the parents.
who ws the child that divorced his parents and what year did he do it
A child without parents is an orphan.