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Wedding   /wˈɛdɪŋ/   Listen
Wedding

noun
1.
The social event at which the ceremony of marriage is performed.  Synonyms: hymeneals, nuptials, wedding ceremony.
2.
The act of marrying; the nuptial ceremony.  Synonyms: marriage, marriage ceremony.
3.
A party of people at a wedding.  Synonym: wedding party.



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"Wedding" Quotes from Famous Books



... my arrival home my wife and I celebrated our golden wedding. There was nothing but a golden welcome home, even if I had not returned with my pockets filled ...
— Ox-Team Days on the Oregon Trail • Ezra Meeker

... a friendly shell," said one of the youths, "and it concluded not to come too close to you. These Yankee shells are so loving that sometimes they spray themselves in little pieces all over a fellow, like a shower of rice over a bride at a wedding." ...
— The Rock of Chickamauga • Joseph A. Altsheler

... it, John," Bunch came back. "I can't lead a girl like Alice Grey into the roped arena of matrimony when I haven't the price of an omelette for the wedding breakfast, now ...
— You Can Search Me • Hugh McHugh

... substantial family, and with fair looks and a capacity for getting on. Likewise, a chance for inside tips on the stock market, since he had elected to go in with a brokerage firm. And so they were married, with all of conservative San Francisco at the First Unitarian Church to see the wedding, leavened by a sprinkling of the very rich and a dash of the ultrafashionable. Unfortunately, the inside tips didn't pan out ... absurd and dazzling fortune was succeeded by appalling and irretrievable failure. Starratt, senior, was too young a man to succumb to the scurvy trick of ...
— Broken to the Plow • Charles Caldwell Dobie

... was not the end of the wonderful deeds which were done in that village by the power of the great Glooskap. For the Mikumwess, at the great dance which was held that evening at the wedding, astonished all who beheld him. As he danced around the circle, upon the very hard beaten floor, they saw his feet sink deeper at every step, and ever deeper as the dance went on; ploughing the ground up into high, uneven ridges, forming a trench as he went, until at length only his head was to ...
— The Algonquin Legends of New England • Charles Godfrey Leland


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