So my boyfriend and I have been in a conjugal relationship for over a year. We have only lived together 4 months though.
When asked what my Marital Status is.. Do I have to say Common-Law since we are conjugal? Or do I just put Single since we aren't technically Common-Law yet?
So my boyfriend and I have been in a conjugal relationship for over a year. We have only lived together 4 months though.
When asked what my Marital Status is.. Do I have to say Common-Law since we are conjugal? Or do I just put Single since we aren't technically Common-Law yet?
Common-law and conjugal partner are separate to CIC. Common-law requires you to have been living together at least one year. If you are applying to sponsor him, you can sponsor spouse, common-law, or conjugal partner. Those are all called the "family class".
If you are applying for family class sponsorship, this link will be helpful to you:
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/sponsor/index.asp
Common-law and conjugal partner are separate to CIC. Common-law requires you to have been living together at least one year. If you are applying to sponsor him, you can sponsor spouse, common-law, or conjugal partner. Those are all called the "family class".
If you are applying for family class sponsorship, this link will be helpful to you:
So my boyfriend and I have been in a conjugal relationship for over a year. We have only lived together 4 months though.
When asked what my Marital Status is.. Do I have to say Common-Law since we are conjugal? Or do I just put Single since we aren't technically Common-Law yet?
You should apply single since you don't complete the 1 year period as per CIC. It'd be better you put single in the application and explain why you can't be with him in the covering letter
That is not nice thing to say. Yes, I answered your question. You said, "When asked what my Marital Status is.. Do I have to say Common-Law since we are conjugal" and I clearly told you common-law and conjugal partner are separate, therefore if you are conjugal, you cannot say you are common-law. The link I gave you showed that common-law and conjugal are separate.