This is a file, commonly a rasp, but it could be a mill file or a bastard file, that is rounded on one side and flat on the other side.
The Suicide File was formed in 2000 in Boston, Massachusetts.
A file for certain eyes only.
A file or document that is for certain people's eyes only.
A MP3 file is actually a compressed WAV file. The compression is: WAV file size / MP3 file size Bitrate is the amount of kBits a mp3 file uses in 1 second. So a 320kB/s file uses 320kBit in 1 second(or 40kBytes/s) The relation is that if the bitrate gets bigger, the compression get's lower.
If you are considered married at the end of the year, you can never file single. If you don't want to file jointly with your spouse, you can choose "married filing separately." Under rare circumstances where you have not lived with your spouse at all during the last six months of the year, your spouse is not returning, and you meet the other qualifications for head of household, you may file as Head of Household. Frequently it's better to file as married filing jointly though...especially if one has a high and the other a low income.
No, just because you get married does not mean you have to file jointly. You can always file separately. Hope this helped.
I don't think you can file jointly with a non spouse, however if one of you is not working, can be a dependent of the other.
You can file your federal taxes jointly if you are married. Even if your spouse is unemployed, filing jointly means he or she is still responsible for any outstanding taxes due should you not pay.
Any married person has the option of filing as "Married filing separately" which requires no reporting or signature of the spouse. You can also still file as "Married filing jointly" if you both wish to do so as long as you can get the spouse's signature.
No. You can file based on your marital status as of December 31st of the tax year.
No. The optio of filing jointly or individually can be chosen and changed every year, based on which is best for you.
You cannot file as single. You can file as married filing jointly or married filing separately. In very rare circumstances, you can file as head of household if you did not live with your spouse for even one day during the last six months of the year (and this was not a temporary absence with intention to return) and meet the other qualifications to file as head of household.
If your common law marriage is recognized in the state where you now live, or in the state where the relationship began, you are considered married for tax purposes. Assuming that you are living with your spouse, you may file as Married Filing Jointly or Married Filing Separately. You may not file as Single or Head of Household.
The federal government (nor any state government that I can think of) does not recognize plural marriages. If you are legally married to a person, you cannot file jointly with a different person. You must either file jointly with your legal spouse or file as "married filing separately." If you did not live with your legal spouse at all during the last six months of the year and meet all of the other requirements for filing as Head of Household, you may do so. You may not file as single. If you marry a person who is already married to another, for tax purposes you are a single person and cannot file jointly. Even if the other person gets a divorce, the government does not recognize your marriage unless you get married again after the divorce is final. If any of these marriages are same-sex marriages, remember that the federal government does not recognize the existence of same-sex marriages.
There is no time limit. If you are married during the tax year, you can file jointly.
Yes