They will wed in the fall. The actress wed her fourth husband last year. The novel weds tragedy and comedy. His new writing job wedded his love of words and his eye for fashion.
Recent Examples on the WebThe company selling the container, At Your Service Tent and Event Rentals, usually works wedding parties. Victor Llorente, Popular Mechanics, 24 Apr. 2020 And expenditures have indeed grown, along with the social media wedding industrial complex and the pressures to pull off a luxurious, grand-scale event.NBC News, 17 Apr. 2020 Between showers, bachelorette and bachelor parties and the big day itself, wedding party members spend an average of about $730, according to a 2018 Bankrate study. Rebekah Tuchscherer, USA TODAY, 16 July 2019 Anu Rajasingham, a 35-year-old public health engineer for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, visited one such home in the Atlanta area last year while searching for wedding saris from Sabyasachi Mukherjee. Sapna Maheshwari, New York Times, 25 Feb. 2020 After their lavish wedding in Capri, Italy, last week, the newlyweds have been traveling around the European country, riding on jet skis and celebrating a post-wedding party with their friends. Helen Murphy, PEOPLE.com, 10 Aug. 2019 Princess Eugenie's royal wedding weekend may be coming an end, but that hasn't stopped wedding guests from posting about the celebrations online. Amy Mackelden, Harper's BAZAAR, 14 Oct. 2018 There is a portrait of Ben and Xenia’s wedding party, pictures of Ella trick-or-treating in a tiny bat costume, splashing in a backyard baby pool, sitting on her mother’s lap at Legoland. Caitlin Gibson, Washington Post, 9 Dec. 2019 The incident stems from a pre-wedding party on August 30, when the wedding party and friends spent an afternoon rafting, paddling and drinking on the Delaware River in Pennsylvania, according to an affidavit of probable cause. Eric Levenson, CNN, 7 Oct. 2019 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English wedden, from Old English weddian; akin to Middle High German wetten to pledge, Old English wedd pledge, Old High German wetti, Goth wadi, Latin vad-, vas bail, security