ForumTitleContentMemberSexCountryDate/Time
Europe & Eurasia (except the UK and Russia)French/American Couples - Part II - 2011

Bouh, j'croyais que tu avais lu tout l'ancien post....



Ben j'ai tout lu une fois...
Mais quand on est entrain d'obtenir son visa, toute la procédure à réaliser une fois aux US reste floue et ne me parle pas forcément, n'a pas trop de sens.

Maintenant, je commence à mettre tout ça en ordre et j'essaie de retrouver toutes les infos.
J'avais aussi lu dans l'ancien forum que le Consulat de San Francisco était plus à cheval sur la paperasse. Apparemment, ça a l'air d'être aussi le cas à Chicago :P .

Avoir un résumé de la procédure en un post = plutôt cool pour les nouveaux ;)
sysyphusMaleFrance2011-08-01 11:14:00
Europe & Eurasia (except the UK and Russia)French/American Couples - Part II - 2011
Cool, je viens de voir que je dépends du Consulat Général de San Francisco, 15 heures de route non-stop s'ils veulent voir ma tête... l'agence consulaire de Boise ne s'occupant pas du tout de la paperasse !

Je viens de voir leur site... ils ont l'air assez tâtillons sur la publication des bans et pour toutes les formalités en général...
J'ai envoyé un mail pour voir si on pouvait faciliter tout ça...

Trop hâte d'en découdre avec tous les papiers B-)

Edited by sysyphus, 31 July 2011 - 06:32 PM.

sysyphusMaleFrance2011-07-31 18:32:00
Europe & Eurasia (except the UK and Russia)French/American Couples - Part II - 2011
Coucou !

J'essayais de retrouver une compilation de la paperasse qui m'attend maintenant aux US.
J'ai retrouvé ce post de S&AA dans l'ancien sujet qui a le mérite de tout regrouper :

- Obtain marriage license at courthouse
- Résiliation Bouygtel (ces enfoirés ont exigé que ma fiancée leur écrive une lettre d'hébergement avec justificatif de domicile!!!),
- SSN application,
- Inscription au consulat de France,
- Déclaration d'intention de mariage au consulat de France,
- Wedding!
- Déclaration de mariage au consulat de France,
- Changement de SSN pour Sher et baby
- AOS application (work permit et GC process included),
- Driver's license application,
- Inscription sur l'assurance santé de Sher
- Me déclarer sur l'assurance voiture de Sher
- Police coverage insurance information (if emergency)
- Sher's life insurance information (if...)


Vous pensez que tout y est ?
sysyphusMaleFrance2011-07-31 17:36:00
Europe & Eurasia (except the UK and Russia)French/American Couples - Part II - 2011
Salut,
Coucou dans le nouveau thread !

Tu n'as besoin que d'un extrait de casier judiciaire en francais pour l'entretien à l'embassade.
Sinon, tu es de la même génération que moi : tu dois présenter une copie de ton attestation de JAPD. Si tu viens avec l'original, elle te fera une copie ;)

Départ mardi pour moi, POE Salt Lake :)
sysyphusMaleFrance2011-07-22 11:29:00
VietnamOptions for a Student to Sponser his Fiancee from Viet Nam?
My USC wife was unemployed through our whole K-1 process. Her mother, who makes more than enough for a household of 4, was our cosponsor, and everything went fine.

Of course, we were going through the Vancouver, Canada consulate, which is notoriously easy-going. But assuming the Vietnam consulate accepts cosponsors, that part at least shouldn't be a problem.

The CR-1 process is significantly cheaper than the K-1 process, but requires you to get married first, and then be separated for another 8-12 months. But it allows her to work the instant she lands in the US, and saves you the AOs fees, and so may very well be the better option in your situation.
HeatDeathMaleCanada2011-03-08 12:44:00
USCIS Service Centersdoes this mean he gets another interview?
Department of State is the section of the government that operates the consulates and embassies. Because your case has been returned to the Department of State, they will return it to the appropriate embassy, who, having to do something with it, will almost certainly give you a second interview. Do not expect the consulate to be particularly happy about this, and do not expect the second interview to be particularly easy.

People with direct experience with Casa will be able to give more details about how second interviews at Casa usually go, but I would recommend in the strongest possible terms, unless you hear otherwise from a significant number of Casa second interview alumni, that you plan on attending that interview with your husband. At some consulates, not attending the second interview can result in a far lower likelihood of success.
HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-04-11 23:47:00
USCIS Service CentersDo I need USCIS anymore?

Is your timeline correct? You submitted your I-130 in 2001?

It's probably a typo for 2011, and K-1 applicants don't use the I-130 - they start with an I-129F.

K-1 applicants actually have almost no interaction with the NVC, certainly relative to IR-1/CR-1 applicants. Once USCIS approves the I-129F, NVC just take a week to effectively rubber-stamp it and forward it on to the consulate. Unlike with CR-1s, NVC's involvement is completely transparent to the K-1 applicant - if they didn't send a letter with the consulate case number, we'd never know they were involved at all.
HeatDeathMaleCanada2012-01-07 13:49:00
USCIS Service CentersDo I need USCIS anymore?
During the K-1 application process, once the petitioner (US citizen) receives the letter from NVC saying that the case has been sent to the consulate (and that includes your consulate case number) two things happen:

A ) as you correctly surmise, neither of you will have to communicate with USCIS at all until the beneficiary (non-US citizen) files for Adjustment of Status, several months from now, after they receive the visa, enter the US, and marry the petitioner.

B ) the petitioner's role in the process is now basically done until Removal of Conditions, over two years from now. All immigration correspondence and communication relating to the visa application, PoE, and Adjustment of Status will be directed to, or expected to be initiated by, the beneficiary.

The next communication with USCIS will be, as I said above, when the petitioner files for AOS, EAD, and AP documents, after you two marry. In the meantime the petitioner will be actively communicating with the Consulate to apply for the visa itself, arrange their interview, etc. In answer to your question, no, it does not sound like there is any need for you to contact USCIS at this time.
HeatDeathMaleCanada2012-01-07 13:44:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)the next best steps for a Canadian wanting to marry a US citizen
Admins, you may want to move this thread out to somewhere less specific...
HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-01-08 15:54:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)the next best steps for a Canadian wanting to marry a US citizen

the Id I showed included my passport, DL, and birth certificates. . . nothing was stamped

Does one need proof of entry before getting married in the US?

I have no other documents and have not violated any laws. . . that I know of. . .I came as a visitor and am still

we are mature couple and know what we want, but we want to do things as fast and/but legal as possible.

(edited to add more info)sorry I had to re-post this as the edit


If you had NO intention of marrying and staying when you entered the US [and can prove that, see below], then yes, you can marry and apply for a green card.

You would do so by filing an I-130 at the same time as you file the I-485 application for permanent residence.

There are two big cautions to keep in mind though:

The first is that you will need some way to prove that you had no intent to marry at the time you entered to US. You could prove this by demonstrating that you had strong ties to Canada at the time you left (Mortgage payments, an employer who was expecting you to return, rental agreement, etc...) Failure to prove this could be construed as having misrepresented yourself to the customs officer who let you in, which would result in your green card being denied, which leads to caution number two:

Unlike adjusting status from a fiance visa (or a K-3 spousal nonimmigrant visa), when you adjust status from a tourist visa (which is what you effectively have) there is no option for appeal if your adjustment of status application is denied.

Don't get me wrong, many people have successfully adjusted status from a tourist visa, and everything has gone completely fine. But it is a significantly riskier approach. The odds of success are basically the same (very good) but the consequences associated with the possible denial are significantly more difficult to overcome.

The safer (and IMHO, better) approach would be either for you to return to Canada, and begin the process of applying for a K-1 fiancee visa, and then get married in the US after you move down there permanently, or to get married now, return to Canada, and begin the process of applying for a CR-1 spousal immigrant visa.
HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-01-08 15:24:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)Finally my fiancee got her visa after 16 months of AP!!

Congratulations that she finally got it!!

To be honest, I don't understand their system either. It seems schizophrenic. One would think, the Department of Homeland Security, the USCIS and the corresponding consulate should decide on the grounds of the same information.

<SNIP>


Congratulations!

The system is schizophrenic. Rather literally. The split-personality between INS (now USCIS) and the Department of State over who gets to control how much of the immigration process goes back, literally, well into the 1800s.

Immigration and Naturalization Services, a section of the Department of Justice, was never terribly thrilled that the Department of State had final say over who got visas (a state of affairs that is literally as old as the country, based primarily on the inconvenient fact that Department of State builds and staffs the embassies and is therefore the only branch of the government with any real presence in other countries).

When INS got folded into the Department of Homeland Security and renamed USCIS, there was a MASSIVE turf war between DHS and State over visa granting authority. State have literally hundreds of years of tradition on their side there, so they retained the authority, avoiding having their visa sections folded into DHS. Don't think DHS was happy about that. Still aren't, I imagine.

And the third split personality in the whole mix is Customs and Border Protection, which DID get folded into DHS with INS (USCIS). Nevertheless they don't talk to USCIS much, don't seem especially conversant with USCIS procedures, and (I suspect, for the front line guys anyways) rather wish USCIS and State wouldn't complicate their jobs by giving so many people paperwork-heavy visas for them to process :)

So there you have it: Not one, not two, but THREE separate federal agencies, none of whom talk to each other, or even indeed seem to like each other all that much, all of whom must be dealt with, in their turn, by each prospective immigrants. My USC inlaws say they now understand why there is so much illegal immigration :)
HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-01-08 16:10:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)After 22 Long Months
Congratulations!
:dance: :dance: :dance: :dance: :dance:

It goes to show two things:

1 ) GOD IS GOOD!

2 ) If you persevere, keep going, don't panic, and never give up, and avoid the three showstoppers (entering without inspection, fraudulent representation as a US citizen, and misrepresentation) that any immigration system obstacle can be overcome. You just have to be patient and keep at it. It's just a matter of keeping saying "Yes, we can" one more time than they can say "No, you can't" :)
HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-02-04 15:49:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)Petty crime exception
You can try to talk a lawyer into working "pro bono" [the legal profession, as a community, expects lawyers, as working professionals, to devote a certain percentage of their working hours to working cases for free]. Catholic Charities is an organization that can put you in touch with immigration lawyers willing to take pro bono clients. I'm virtually certain you don't have to be Catholic. :)

Alternatively, you could try to do most of the leg-work yourself and just drop a few hundred dollars here and there, as you can afford it, on short consultations, to get answers to issues that come up and occasional guidance.
HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-11-28 23:53:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)Petty crime exception
I think [can anyone corroborate?] that you just make a formal request for the waiver in your AOS packet cover letter, and include the I-601 and all necessary accompanying documentation along with the normal AOS packet forms and documentation.

But the I-601 form itself, and the accompanying documentation, that is what should be prepared by a lawyer with significant experience with this stuff.

As for your InfoPass appointment, it might be worth getting a 30 minute consultation with an immigration lawyer to find out if talking to USCIS about your case, in the absence of counsel, is a good idea.

Edited by HeatDeath, 28 November 2010 - 03:35 PM.

HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-11-28 15:33:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)Petty crime exception
I would keep the appointment, and ask them about it. It don't think it could hurt anything.

But once your case gets to the point where you are filing an I-601, most people here would recommend getting a good immigration lawyer. I know we say that most normal cases don't normally need a lawyer, but cases that need an I-601 are no longer normal. That I-601 represents careful argumentation and advocation of your position, just as if this were a courtroom situation. You want it prepared by someone who is intimately familiar with what they are doing.

Because US immigration is defined by US federal law, it is the same over the entire US. Make sure you get the best lawyer you can find and afford. Don't worry about whether they are local to you. Believe me, the long distance phone fees will be the least of your concerns. Better to get a good lawyer a few states away than a total n00b who happens to be local.

An immigration discussion forum that has much more detailed information on I-601 preparation than we do is immigrate2us.net. If you haven't already, you should probably spend several hours digging through their archives for anything even tangentially related to your situation.

Edited by HeatDeath, 27 November 2010 - 12:04 PM.

HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-11-27 11:59:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)K1 Visa 221g help
You don't say whether you're dealing with Vancouver or Montreal, but the US consulates in Canada are very responsive to emails. Vancouver in particular, in my experience, will get back to you within 24-36 hours if you email them at VancouverK@state.gov and include your consulate case number. I don't know Montreal's email address off hand, and I don't think they're quite as fast as Vancouver, but they're very good too, much better than the consulates in many other countries. If you email them to ask for the status on your case, they should let you know what's going on, I would think.
HeatDeathMaleCanada2012-04-11 17:51:00
United KingdomVisiting Canada for a UK Green Card Holder
Canada does not require visas for US green card holders, not that he would need one. UK citizens can get into Canada with just a UK passport anyways.

You use your US passport to get into Canada as a US tourist, and your US passport to get back into the US as a returning citizen.

He uses his UK passport to get into Canada as a UK citizen [he could also use his US green card to get into Canada as a US permanent resident tourist], and his UK passport + Green card to get back into the US as a returning permanent resident.

You're both good to go, it sounds like. The state id doesn't really enter into it.

Have fun!
HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-08-11 11:57:00
Mexico, Latin & South AmericaDo you have to have a Mexican Passport at your visa interview?
He will definitely need a Mexican passport for the K-1 visa process. The US consulate will need something to glue his visa into.
But seriously, nobody, not even Canadians, not even US citizens, gets into the US without a passport anymore. It doesn't matter what kind of visa or other documents you have. And the consulate won't even issue a visa without the passport.

I don't know the details, but I would imagine that the way a Mexican citizen in Mexico gets a passport is the same way anybody gets a passport from their own country. They get a hold of the appropriate form, fill it out, send it in and/or go down to the appropriate government office, wait a few hours, talk to somebody for 5 minutes, go home, and wait several weeks/months.

If it's anything like Canada or the US, there may be an option to pay extra for expedited processing. Depending on the level of corruption in the local government he may want to sling some bribe money around too. :)

I'll recommend this thread be moved to the Mexico regional forum. You'll get more specific answers there.

Edited by HeatDeath, 31 October 2010 - 01:56 PM.

HeatDeathMaleCanada2010-10-31 13:54:00
United KingdomVisitin spouse in the UK

Hey all,

So I am in the midst of the Visa process, and I want to go visit my wife in a few months in the UK. I'll only be there a little over a week. At this point I'm planning on bringing bank statements, letter of employment, and the NOA1 (and NOA2 if I'm at that point by then). Is there anything else I should bring with me, to show them at the border? I'm currently living with family, so I don't have a lease. Any tips and suggestions would be greatly appreciated.


I've been hassled there a lot lately because I have so many stamps in my passport entering the UK (part of the problem is that every time we took a trip to Europe from the UK it gets stamped AGAIN coming back into the UK). The first thing they usually ask for is proof of a return ticket, but as I was told by the (very aggressive) immigration woman, they have to trust that you're going to use it. I think the letter of employment is a good thing to have so then they know you have a reason to go back and also the NOA1 shows that you have plans to bring your wife to the US and that you don't intend to move to the UK. They might be more likely to question you since you are actually married and still living apart, but if you just tell them the truth, that your wife is planning to move to the US, then I don't see why you should get much hassle.
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-07-19 16:53:00
United KingdomRoyal Mail Redirection
Thanks! That is very reassuring!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-07-27 16:09:00
United KingdomRoyal Mail Redirection
Has anybody used the Royal Mail Redirection service while going through this visa process? Will there be any correspondence that needs to be signed for or sent in a special way (except of course for the visa/passport after the interview, but from what I understand, after the interview he can have the visa sent to any address right?) Thanks!!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-07-27 14:51:00
United KingdomDocuments for Interview

They don't care one bit about having original copies of the petitioner's information. By the embassy stage, the petitioner has already been checked out and ok'ed by USCIS and the NVC. The only person the embassy cares about is the person applying for the visa. Absolutely no need for originals. If the applicant wants to take along copies just in case they have been separated from the file, that's fine, but the likelihood of that happening is minuscule.


Thanks! Just what I has hoping! :thumbs:
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-07-29 14:41:00
United KingdomDocuments for Interview
For the interview at the London Embassy, do they want to see the originals/certified copies of the documents for the US citizen... the birth certificate/divorce decree/etc.? Or do they only want the original documents for the UK citizen?

Thanks!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-07-29 11:00:00
United Kingdomnon-immigration related
Turquoise jewelry for the women, baseball hats for the men.... my fiance always wants to buy a pair of Levi's and/or some Nike trainers when he's here too!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-07-29 23:03:00
United KingdomCan my wife wait here with me?

We sent our I-130 yesterday (August 3rd, 2010), and now the wait begins.

My wife was here in the UK with me from January 8th until June 24th. Nearly 6 months. Would my wife be allowed to come to the UK again so we can do most of the waiting together here in the UK? I am worried because I know that she can only stay for 6 months but does this mean 6 months at a time or 6 months within a 12 month period?

Thanks

Andy and Alicia


It's my understanding that both are true. She's not supposed to stay for longer than 6 months per calendar year, but she also can't stay for longer than 6 months at one given time. For example, she couldn't come in October and stay until the following May, even though, technically, she hasn't spent more than 6 months of each year there. I'm pretty sure it's calendar year and not a 'rolling year' but I could be wrong. If she's going to attempt it without getting some type of UK visa, she should be ready to show the I-130 application as proof that she intends to return to the US and maybe you could write a letter of financial support for her to have that explains the situation? In the end it'll be up to the particular UK immigration officer though and she should be prepared for possible denial. Good Luck!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-04 10:31:00
United KingdomDumb stuff Border Control does
I don't think these systems are very sophisticated... 7 months AFTER I had changed my name due to a divorce, somebody stole my identity and used my SSN and my FORMER married name to take out a loan that ended up in default and on my credit report. I sent them a nasty letter asking why a company would allow somebody to borrow money using a SSN that doesn't officially match the name (I got no response....). I know this wasn't related to immigration, but it makes me think that the presence or absence of a middle name would not be much of an issue.
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-10 10:21:00
United KingdomUK entry stamp question

yeah take all of that, good idea. usually they stamp it with the city, date & immigration officer #, and then again with the 'leave to enter for 6 months' stamp also.

That time though he told me that it will say 6 months, but that I was only allowed to stay for the 2 weeks that I told him I was intending to...and that in the computer he was noting that it was just a 2 week authorization.

The main stamp was the same, but the 'leave to enter' stamp was different. It had an area where he wrote '6 months', and above that was another area where he wrote the code 'HXK (and then 5 digits)'


Yeah that sounds like what mine looks like, but they weren't nice enough to tell me what it meant :bonk: Glad I asked and will be prepared now! 5 months will have passed between that stamp and when I next go, but I suppose they won't care about that. Thanks!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-13 14:36:00
United KingdomUK entry stamp question

..yeah, I was "that guy" lol

when he wrote that code on my passport, he told me that this will trigger them to detain me next time I try to enter..and that I would have to explain the entire ordeal that happened again from the first detainment.

It did happen, they did detain me next time while they called my fiancee to verify that what I had told them was true. It was a piece of cake (5 minutes or so...compared to the 3 hour original detainment!)


Thanks for your response! If you don't mind, what did this code look like??

I think I'll just have to bring lots of extra evidence when I go next time.... letter from fiance, letter from work, house lease agreement, pay stubs, bank statements... I also just put together a list of all my previous travel dates for the UK (which helps to explain all my passport stamps) that shows I was never in the country for longer than I was supposed to. Feels like overkill, but better safe than sorry!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-13 12:24:00
United KingdomUK entry stamp question
I hope I'm worrying for nothing, but I thought somebody here might know about this..... The last time I entered the UK (at Stansted) I was grilled big time but eventually they said they would give me 'the benefit of the doubt' and let me in. But, above the regular entry stamp they put another stamp and hand wrote in some code (starts with 'HTV' followed by a bunch of numbers) and hand wrote in 6 months leave to enter... I've never had them do this before, so is it something I should worry about?? Will it trigger them to question me further next time? I just want to be fully prepared next time I go! :wacko:

Thanks!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-11 11:33:00
United KingdomCan American visit UK without problems?

it should be similar to the US - you go through passport control at your POE and then on to your domestic transer. I have never heard of such a thing happening in the UK. However, if you arrive in Dublin and go through Irish border control and have a connecting flight to the UK you will not go through UK border control.


I recently read an article (can't find it now...) about people coming into the UK illegally by buying a ticket for a flight from Northern Ireland on someone like Ryanair and printing off the boarding pass so that when they arrived at the airport (on a flight from some other country) they waited until the Ryanair flight was there and just followed those people through the non-passport controlled 'Channel Islands/N. Ireland' entry and never went through regular immigration. I can imagine they will probably change that process soon in some way to prevent this sort of thing. But if people aren't paying attention, I could see somebody getting through that line accidentally.
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-13 12:11:00
United KingdomInsurance post-move but pre-wedding!!
Typically you can get around the exclusion of pre-existing conditions by showing proof that you've had insurance coverage for the preceding 6 months, and NHS counts as coverage.

Good Luck!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-09-01 10:13:00
United KingdomIf I go to my GP prior to the PME, what shots do I need?
The vaccination requirements state that anybody over 50 needs to get a flu shot annually during flu season. Has anybody had a fiance over 50 who had to deal with this? What if the medical is not during flu season, does that make them ineligible until the next flu shots become available? Seems picky. Glad I saw that now and will make him get one this winter just to make sure! :bonk:
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-09-02 19:59:00
United Kingdomwatching british tv from usa
I'm also so glad this got resurrected. It works great!! Thanks!
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-07-14 20:58:00
United KingdomEPL Prediction Compo - 2010/11
I'm not very good at this sort of thing, but I will try! I'm sure you can guess who I support by my name :)
goonergirlFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-07-19 16:58:00
Waivers (I-601 and I-212) and Administrative Processes (221g)ar/security check

His paperwork reached the embassy in Ankara in February, his interview was April 25, he was told he was approved pending his security check.
I emailed the embassy and recieved a response today as follows:

Our records indicate that your security check has not been completed yet. According to the response we received from State Department your case is on hold status, which will require more time to process and cannot be predicted how long it would take. Please note that all pending clearances are checked on regular basis. Today we are sending another follow up to the State Department.

Anyone ever heard of this? What is a hold status? Does it mean he is still waiting in line for his check or maybe I am really engaged to a terrorist?

Plz let this be finished soon


actually this is fairly typical... even in a fairly nice country like Uzbekistan my girlfriend took like 4 months to get AP over with. And honestly, it's all about red tape and bureaucracy.

patience is the key.
A WangMaleUzbekistan2007-08-07 16:06:00
Mexico, Latin & South AmericaBrasileiritchas
E Laura, voce deu um pulo na Kelly Services? Naum manda o curriculo, vai lah pessoalmente e jah faz todos os testes, talvez ajude! :thumbs:

Eu tenho varios conhecidos que usam a Kelly e adoram e todos falam para ir pessoalmente e se cadastrar com eles que as coisas movem mais rapido... :thumbs:
MayraFemaleBrazil2007-06-29 13:15:00
Mexico, Latin & South AmericaBrasileiritchas
Nossa, quantas novidades nesse cantinho brasileiro! :dance:

PARABENS PELO TRABALHO NOVO, LIZ!!!!! Espero que goste! :thumbs:


Laura, voce jah pensou num daqueles "data entry" jobs que voce trabalha de casa? Naum ganha muito, mas tambem eh melhor que nada e voce se mantem ocupada ateh conseguir algo mais na sua area...Eu tenho uma lista em casa (da epoca em que eu estava desesperada por um emprego) e se voce quiser posto aqui no Brasileiritchas, eles naum sao fakes e sao uma otima forma de comecar.
MayraFemaleBrazil2007-06-29 13:12:00
Mexico, Latin & South AmericaBrasileiritchas

Minto ... O Luke sabe falar a palavra esquilo. Como eu tenho dificuldade em pronunciar squirrel eu falo em portugues mesmo quando me refiro ao animal, entao ele teve que aprender na marra, mas levou um tempo. :lol:


:lol:

O Justin decidiu que o meu nome e Maydah em vez de Mayra...O meu nome e pronunciado como se tivesse um i no lugar do y e como ele naum consegue enrolar a lingua para fazer o "ra" ele fala que meu nome e "Maydahhhhh"... :lol:

:no:
MayraFemaleBrazil2007-06-21 13:29:00
Mexico, Latin & South AmericaBrasileiritchas
O Justin soh quis saber de aprender o que naum presta (palavroes). Acho que ele aprendeu todos os palavroes possivies (sim, baixaria total..lol).

Ele aprendeu a falar "Eu te amo", "Obrigado" e soh. Agora nos palavroes...vixe...sabe todos lol!

Ah esqueci, ele tambem aprendeu a falar "Ta bom"! :D
MayraFemaleBrazil2007-06-21 13:22:00
Mexico, Latin & South AmericaBrasileiritchas
Acho que a primeira vez que comi PF foi aqui...Foi no dia em que eu encontrei esse boteco/mercadinho brasileiro. Foi uma comilanca horrenda, PF, kibe, coxinha e suco de caju! :P

Meu marido gostou tanto de prato feito, mas tanto que agora todo sabado ele vai buscar no boteco...lol...

Esse mercadinho eh muito bacana, tem ateh pao frances agora (quentinho! hmmm)...Eu compro a minha farinha de Kibe lah e faco kibe que de para varios dias e deixo congelados, maridao vai no congelador e frita (quando esta inspirado)...

Eu sinto saudades do pastel de feira, comprei a massa, fiz em casa mas naum eh a mesma coisa....:(
MayraFemaleBrazil2007-06-20 13:04:00