wedding (noun)

  • 91wedding band — /ˈwɛdɪŋ bænd/ (say weding band) noun → wedding ring …

  • 92wedding breakfast — /ˈwɛdɪŋ brɛkfəst/ (say weding brekfuhst) noun a meal taken after a wedding ceremony in celebration of the event …

  • 93wedding cake — /ˈwɛdɪŋ keɪk/ (say weding kayk) noun a cake, traditionally made in tiers and coated with icing, cut by a bride and bridegroom and eaten at a wedding reception …

  • 94wedding charm — /ˈwɛdɪŋ tʃam/ (say weding chahm) noun a wedding token designed to be hung on a bracelet, ribbon, etc …

  • 95wedding march — /ˈwɛdɪŋ matʃ/ (say weding mahch) noun a piece of music accompanying a bride as she walks down a church aisle towards the waiting groom, or the bride and groom as they walk towards the exit after the wedding ceremony …

  • 96wedding party — /ˈwɛdɪŋ pati/ (say weding pahtee) noun 1. Also, bridal party. the bride and groom, with their parents and attendants. 2. a party for a wedding …

  • 97wedding token — /ˈwɛdɪŋ toʊkən/ (say weding tohkuhn) noun a small memento, in the shape of a shell, heart, coin, etc., given to a guest at a wedding …

  • 98wedding — [OE] A wedding is etymologically a ceremony at which people ‘promise’ to marry each other. The word’s source, the verb wed [OE], goes back to prehistoric Germanic *wathjōjan (source also of German wetten ‘wager’). This in turn was derived from… …

    Word origins

  • 99wedding — I (Roget s IV) n. Syn. nuptials, wedlock, marriage ceremony, matrimony; see marriage 1 , union 3 . II (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) n. 1. marriage vows, nuptials, matrimony, espousal, holy wedlock, ceremony. When the blind lead the blind. George… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 100wedding tackle — UK / US noun [uncountable] British humorous a man s sexual organs …

    English dictionary