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Married   /mˈɛrid/   Listen
Married

adjective
1.
Joined in matrimony.  "A married couple"  Antonym: unmarried.
2.
Of or relating to the state of marriage.  Synonyms: marital, matrimonial.  "Marital fidelity" , "Married bliss"
noun
1.
A person who is married.



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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"Married" Quotes from Famous Books



... current facts about India—about almost every country, and about our own trade, etc. Then (one of several circumstances that could be seen more closely) among my mother's kindred in the north, I watched the ruin of two lives. They began married life together, with good prospects and sufficient means, in a lovely little nest among the hills, beyond the Rochdale smoke. Soon this became too narrow. 'A splendid trade,' more mills, frequent changes into even finer dwellings, luxurious living, ...
— On the Old Road, Vol. 2 (of 2) - A Collection of Miscellaneous Essays and Articles on Art and Literature • John Ruskin

... work and forgotten by the city they have built, belonged the Applebys. They lived in a brown and dusky flat, with a tortoise-shell tabby, and a canary, and a china hen which held their breakfast boiled eggs. Every Thursday Mother wrote to her daughter, who had married a prosperous and severely respectable druggist of Saserkopee, New York, and during the rest of her daytimes she swept and cooked and dusted, went shyly along the alien streets which had slipped into the cobblestoned village she had known as a girl, and came back to dust again and wait for Father's ...
— The Innocents - A Story for Lovers • Sinclair Lewis

... eggs, and coffee. By degrees he had raised himself to the position of ploughman, and never ploughman drove a straighter or leveller furrow. He had won prizes at the annual ploughing and harrowing matches: and upon the strength of ten and sixpence a week had married Nancy Tugby, to whom he had been engaged off and on for eleven years. Nancy was a frugal housewife, and worked hard, morning, noon and night. She was quite a treasure to Bumpkin; and, what with taking ...
— The Humourous Story of Farmer Bumpkin's Lawsuit • Richard Harris

... eastern and western avenues, and the elevated roads on the avenues which these have invaded. In such places they are shops below and apartments above, and I cannot see that the inmates seem at all sensible that they are unfitly housed in them. People are born and married, and live and die in the midst of an uproar so frantic that you would think they would go mad of it; and I believe the physicians really attribute something of the growing prevalence of neurotic disorders ...
— Through the Eye of the Needle - A Romance • W. D. Howells

... of disappointment hovered over Katie's clear young brow, but was instantly chased away by the thought that to be engaged was almost as splendid as to be married. ...
— Zuleika Dobson - or, An Oxford Love Story • Max Beerbohm


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