Original Question:
Should I request an embassy to extend me a visa or issue me a visa?
Just the way an invitation is extended, I thought I could ask embassies for extending me a visa. With that thought I have written supporting letters to embassies, asking to extend me a visa and I have been granted visas as well, without any embassy getting confused about whether I'm asking for a new visa or requesting extension of an existing one.
However, this doesn't mean that the my usage was correct.
They probably just did not read the letter or maybe ignored my incorrect English. It was a non-issue until this time when I got response back from someone (not working at the embassy) telling me to write another letter that is about issuing me a new visa, instead of extending me a visa.
I looked up online to see whether I committed a mistake and could find no place which clearly says that visas cannot be extended (so as to mean - "be newly issued" rather than extending a current one) and exclusively have to be issued.
There is enough material, though, to understand that a request to extend a visa can be easily confused with requesting extension for a visa.
But then this too doesn't mean that 'extending a visa' cannot be used for conveying the request to issue a new visa.
My comprehensive questions:
- Is there any authoritative answer that tells the correct method to request a visa stamp on your passport?
- Is there any authoritative answer that tells that asking the embassy to extend a visa is wrong?
- Yes, I can write the letter, requesting the embassy to grant me a visa. I'd like to know if this is indeed the most appropriate way?
- In that case, is requesting to 'extend me a visa' an exclusively wrong phrase?