marry
marry
englantinaida, naimisiin jkn kanssa, avioitua
vihkiä
rak|en|pass|married|to olla naimisissa jonkun kanssa
rak|en|pass|get|married|to naimisiin jonkun kanssa
Esimerkkejä:
: When are you planning to marry?
Who 'married' you?
:Kuka 'vihki' teidät?
Liittyvät sanat: divorce
Synonyymisanakirja
marry
toimittaa jumalanpalvelus, yhdistyä, naida, mennä naimisiin, avioitua, ottaa puolisokseen, lyödä hynttyyt yhteen, avioitua jonkun kanssa, mennä naimisiin jonkun kanssa, naida sopimaton henkilö, vihkiä, liittää yhteen.
Rimmaavat sanat
marry rimmaa näiden kanssa:
sherry, sorry, curry, kärry, ostoskärry, peräkärry...
Englannin sanakirja
marry (englanti > suomi)
marry englanniksi
puhekieltä To enter into the conjugal or connubial state; to take a husband or a wife. (defdate)
Neither of her daughters showed any desire to marry.
1641, Evelyn, Diary, quoted in 1869 by Edward J. Wood in The Wedding Day in All Ages and Countries, volume 2, page 241:
1755, The Holy Bible, both Old and New Testament, Digested, Illustrated, and Explained, second edition, page 59:
puhekieltä To be joined (m) (someone) as spouse according to law or custom. (defdate)
She was not happily married.
His daughter was married some five years ago to a tailors apprentice.''
puhekieltä To arrange for the marriage of; to give away as wife or husband. (defdate)
1526, William Tyndale, trans. Bible, Matthew XXIII:
He was eager to marry his daughter to a nobleman.
puhekieltä To take as husband or wife. (defdate)
In some cultures, it is acceptable for an uncle to marry his niece.
puhekieltä To unite; to join together into a close union. (defdate)
The attempt to marry medieval plainsong with speed metal produced interesting results.
(rfdat), Bible (KJV), Jeremiah 3.14:
2006, Lisa C. Hickman, William Faulkner and Joan Williams: The Romance of Two Writers
puhekieltä To unite in wedlock or matrimony; to perform the ceremony of joining spouses; to bring about a marital union according to the laws or customs of a place. (defdate)
A justice of the peace will marry Jones and Smith.
(rfdat), Gay, The what dye call it'':
puhekieltä To place (two ropes) alongside each other so that they may be grasped and hauled on at the same time.
puhekieltä To join (two ropes) end to end so that both will pass through a block.
puhekieltä indeed!, in truth!; a term of asseveration.
William Shakespeare, King Henry IV, Part ii, Act 1, Scene 2,