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Commonly Asked Questions about US Family Law Legal Forms

family law, body of law regulating family relationships, including marriage and divorce, the treatment of children, and related economic matters.
Parents, spouses, and minor children are almost always considered immediate family, while siblings may or may not count. Adoptive parents or children are also considered immediate family, although there is no blood relation. Half-siblings, step-siblings, and other near relatives may be legally ambiguous.
Family law (also called matrimonial law or the law of domestic relations) is an area of the law that deals with family matters and domestic relations.
An in-law is someone who is a relative because of marriage, like your husbands sister or your wifes father. You can refer to your spouses entire family as your in-laws. In some countries, a married woman moves in with her in-laws, symbolically becoming part of their family.
A person is a child-in-law to the parents of the spouse, who are in turn also the parents of those sibling-in-laws (if any) who are siblings of the spouse (as opposed to spouses of siblings). Together, the members of this family affinity group are called the in-laws.