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Marry   /mˈɛri/   Listen
Marry

verb
(past & past part. married; pres. part. marrying)
1.
Take in marriage.  Synonyms: conjoin, espouse, get hitched with, get married, hook up with, wed.
2.
Perform a marriage ceremony.  Synonyms: splice, tie, wed.  "We were wed the following week" , "The couple got spliced on Hawaii"



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"Marry" Quotes from Famous Books



... like water in the desert, for books are not yet included in plantation stores for our islands. The cause is this. The French colonists, whether Creoles or Europeans, consider the West Indies as their country; they cast no wistful looks toward France; they have not even a packet of their own; they marry, educate, and build in and for the West Indies and the West Indies alone. In our colonies it is quite different; except a few regular Creoles to whom gratis rum and gratis coloured mothers for their children have become quite indispensable, every one regards the colony ...
— The trade, domestic and foreign • Henry Charles Carey

... an old squaw man. She had spent several years at the Indian school in Phoenix, and had proved herself an apt pupil. Later she went to work on Simmons' Ranch. She was a very pretty, healthy looking girl, and one day Morgan Jones, the hunter and trapper, asked her to marry him. She went with him to his cabin near the Reservation ...
— Montezuma's Castle and Other Weird Tales • Charles B. Cory

... found there were three men, two women, besides the old woman, four girls, and two boys. One of the tents was placed at a little distance from the others, and in that resided a young married couple.—"And pray," said I, "where and how do you marry?"—"Why," said the first man, "we marry like other folks—they were married at Shoreditch Church—I was married to my old woman here at Hammersmith Church—and my brother-in-law here was married ...
— A Morning's Walk from London to Kew • Richard Phillips

... of my notions. And, with these notions, let me repeat my question, Do you think I ought to marry ...
— Clarissa Harlowe, Volume 9 (of 9) - The History Of A Young Lady • Samuel Richardson

... allowed to select a wife beyond the community to which he belonged, which generally comprehended all his own kindred; 46 nor was any but the sovereign authorized to dispense with the law of nature—or at least, the usual law of nations—so far as to marry his own sister.47 No marriage was esteemed valid without the consent of the parents; and the preference of the parties, it is said, was also to be consulted; though, considering the barriers imposed by the prescribed ...
— History Of The Conquest Of Peru • William Hickling Prescott


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