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My fiancee and I (Florida residents and USA citizens) would like to get married in Paris in the spring. What is the process so that the marriage is legal in the USA?

2007-01-02 07:26:10 · 2 answers · asked by David545 5 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

2 answers

I looked into this when I was getting married too.

France has a residency requirement - which means you have to be in the country for 40 days prior to the wedding. That requirement is never waived.

Check out the US Embassy in France website.

2007-01-02 07:30:35 · answer #1 · answered by harrisnish 3 · 2 0

It's likely that you mean United Statesian citizens. You see, there is no such a thing as ‘American’ nationality, America is not a nation America is a continent with many nations in it. The US never named itself the name of the United States is a designation it comes from the end of the Declaration of Independence, "WE, therefore, the Representatives of the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, in GENERAL CONGRESS, Assembled...". The preamble to the U.S. Constitution reiterated the phrase: "We the People of the United States..." (The authors of these two documents probably used the phrase "united states" in place of a list of colonies/states because they remained uncertain at the time of drafting which colonies/states would sign off on the sentiments therein.) The geographic term "America" specifies the states' home on the American continent.

It is therefor incorrect to refer to US citizens as Americans with the intent of denoting citizenship, or the United States as America with the intent of denoting a nation. Americans have a term for US citizens, we are called United Statesians by the rest of Americans, to say American with the intent of denoting citizenship or America when we mean the United States reflects poorly on our attitude towards the 70% of Americans that are not United Statesians.

Also, although some people would like to believe that America is not one but two continents North America and South America. If you think about it though the term U.S. of A. is a glaring example that this line of thought is incorrect, if America was two continents instead of one, shouldn’t it be U.S. of N.A. (North America)? We say Columbus discovered..... ? AMERICA, not South America or North America.

Hope that helps.

2007-01-02 07:32:04 · answer #2 · answered by r1b1c* 7 · 0 1

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