1. You must have been a permanent resident for at least 5 years or 3 years if married to a US citizen.
2. File the N400 application found on USCIS.GOV.
3. The USCIS will schedule you for fingerprints and subsequentlhy an interview.
4. During the interview you will be asked the questions on the Form N400. You will also be given the following exams: United States government and history, writing English and reading English.
5. If you meet all requirments, you will be scheduled for a swearing in ceremony.
6. At the ceremony you take an oath of allegiance to the US and are given a Naturalizaion certificate. You are now a US citizen...
1).File a declaration of intention 2). 3). 4).Take an oath of citizenship
1.declaration of intention. 2.live in the united states for 5 years. 3.fill out an application. 4.have a meeting government officials. 5.take a citizenship exam 6. Pledge your loyalty to the united states.
It takes steps to create model citizens out of immigrants, and by and large the program does work.
An alien may file a declaration of intention to any naturalization court. this written statement declares that the alien intends to seek U.S citizenship. Then they file a petition for naturalization after 5 years, or 3 years if they are married to a citizen of the U.S. Then they will go through the examination process, then the final hearing
naturalization Is corect answer
It is call Naturalization.
Through the naturalization process citizenship can be gained in US.Immigration Form N-400 should be used and basic eligibility requirements to apply are that you need to be green card holder at least 18 years old and have physical residence in US for a minimum 5 years uninterrupted.
take a test and an oath aka naturalization
naturalization
to become a citizen
naturalization
There are so many pre-requisites before a person can go in for naturalization. The person should have been a Green Card Holder for the past 5 years( 3 years for conditional resident) and accumulated sufficient years for the continuous residence criteria as stipulated by the USCIS. These two are the key steps that influence a person's citizenship application.