No, honey, and it doesn't matter which state you are in. Your biological mother has no jurisdiction in the matter and, in fact, has no more legal control over you than does any other adult. The father who chose you and adopted you is your parent. Your biological mother, sadly, relinquished that a while back. It is fine that she wants you in her life, and fine that you also would like to be there. But she cannot override the person who is your legal parent. If you are seventeen, all you have is one more year--or less--and you can decide to live anywhere you want. Since I cannot know the nature of all of these relationships roiling around you, otherwise I have no idea what you should do. I cannot tell you in whose house you might more enjoy living. I don't know. I can tell you, you do not have much longer until you can find out on your own. Good Luck.
the sibling that hasn't been adopted normally would have the rite to go and see their adopted sibling but it is up to the adoptive parents, social workers advise the adopted parents to allow the siblings to stay in contact but at the end of the day it is up the the adoptive parents to deside,
Snooki is Chilean, but was raised by her adoptive parents who are Italian-American.
I believe it is called a foster father, but why not ask your adoptive father? I doubt he'll be offended, and if you don't think he's the type to answer, ask a social worker, close relative (i.e. mother or adoptive mother), a friend who's also adopted, or a trusted and knowledgeable adult.
Well if the child is adopted before he or she is able to keep any real memory of the adoption the adoptive parents may tell him or her that he/she was adopted when the child is old enough to understand. Telling a child that the were adopted is hard to do, the child will have millions of questions like where is my birth parents, why was I adopted, and you may not be able to answer the. So advise to those telling their child they are adopted write down all the facts you know about the adoption like when it happened why it happened and if their birth parents want to be contacted. If the child was older say 6 and on when he/she was adopted they will know about it and will have questions. In some cases a child isn't told that he/she is adopted and may never know unless they find out on their own.
The 1992 film Mikey is a horror film. It is about a young boy named Mikey Holt who is adopted by a family after his previous adoptive parents die. He turns out to be a violent psychopath.
Adoptive or adopted. A child is adopted, a parent is adoptive.
An adoptive father is a man who has adopted a child.
They are both adjectives, and "adopted" can be a verb as well. "Adoptive" modifies the person who is doing the adopting, e.g. "The adoptive mother." "Adopted" as an adjective modifies the person being adopted, as in "My adopted son." Adopted can also be the past tense of a verb, e.g. "I adopted my son in 2007." And to use both in one sentence: "The adoptive mother adopted her adopted son in 2007." Ta-da!
The word adoptive is an adjective meaning "one who has adopted." An adoptive mother would be one who has adopted a child who was not born from her. At the time of the adoption, the child becomes legally hers, just as if it were born from her.
Adopted children inherit from the adoptive family the same as the adoptive family's biological children do so yes.
the sibling that hasn't been adopted normally would have the rite to go and see their adopted sibling but it is up to the adoptive parents, social workers advise the adopted parents to allow the siblings to stay in contact but at the end of the day it is up the the adoptive parents to deside,
yes because (in most cases) the adoptive parent iz the legal gaurdian.
Personality Traits
I don't see why not
Yes edward ,alice, emmett,jasper,roslie are all adopted
I think you mean "adopted child" and the answer is, yes.
A family who adopts a child is known as adoptive family.