If you use an interpreter, you and the interpreter must both sign and submit the Form G-1256, Declaration for Interpreted USCIS Interview, but you cannot sign it before the interview. You and your interpreter need to sign it in front of the interviewing officer. Please review the form's instructions for more details.
301-424-7737To request in-person interpretation services please contact them by phone (as provided) or via e-mail at interpreter@schreibernet.
Access the LanguageLine App on iOS devices, Android devices, and PCs: Download LanguageLine App for iOS devices or Android™ devices. Go to Insight.LanguageLine on Windows® PC or macOS® with Google Chrome™, Mozilla Firefox®, or Microsoft Edge™
Spanish/Spanish Creole, Chinese, Korean, African languages, Vietnamese, and French (including Patois and Cajun) speakers make up the majority (approximately 80%) of the languages spoken at home among the subpopulation of people 5 years and over who speak English less than “very well”.
Languages available for audio interpreting AcholiDinkaInuktitut Cantonese Gulay Kunama Catalan Gurani Kurmanji Cebuano Haitian Creole Kyrgyz Chaldean Hakka-China Laotian47 more rows
Release form Principal Translations Inglés Espaol release form n (document: signed permission) autorización nf Parents must sign a release form before their children's work can be displayed. Los padres deben firmar una autorización para que los trabajos de sus hijos se puedan exponer.
If we can be of further assistance or you have a question, please contact your Account Executive or: US/Canada Customer Service at (800) 752-6096 | CustomerCare@LanguageLine.