QUOTE(daphne2109 @ Aug 18 2007, 03:36 PM)

By the way naturalization and US citizenship have the same meaning?
Naturalization is the name for the process of gaining US citizenship if you weren't born with US citizenship. If you go through naturalization, you become a citizen. If you weren't born a citizen and you want to become a citizen, you must go through naturalization. But if you were born a US citizen, you don't go through naturalization. So the two terms don't have exactly the same meaning in all contexts, but they may be similar in the context of someone born without US citizenship.
QUOTE(MarilynP)
I am pretty sure you can apply for naturalization/citizenship, 3 years after becoming a permanent resident (conditional or not) if you are married to a US citizen......, someone please correct me if I am wrong about this....
That's generally true, as long as you've been married and living with the same US Citizen spouse for three full years (not two years and nine months) at the time you file. Whether the card started out being conditional or not makes no difference. It also makes no difference how you got the card (work, marriage, visa lottery, whatever).
QUOTE(MarilynP)
but two years after you get your 2 year green card, you need to file to remove conditions (you can file anytime between 90 days and the day the card expires)....
That's true, but only if the card started out being a conditional card. Which would be the case if the marriage was less than two years old at the time the card was granted.