
A spouse is legally married to you; a common-law partner has lived with you for at least 12 continuous months; a conjugal partner is in a committed relationship but cannot live together or marry due to serious barriers.
Canada recognizes three partner categories. A spouse is someone you are legally married to. A common-law partner is someone you have lived with in a marriage-like relationship for at least 12 consecutive months.
A conjugal partner is in a genuine, committed relationship of at least one year but has been prevented from living together or marrying because of significant obstacles such as immigration, religious, or cultural barriers. The conjugal category is meant for couples who genuinely could not meet the marriage or cohabitation requirements, not simply as a matter of convenience.
किसी लाइसेंस प्राप्त ACME सलाहकार से वैयक्तिकृत मूल्यांकन प्राप्त करें, या Acey से पूछें।