ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to marriage or to the relationship between a wife and husband
    connubial bliss
    conjugal visits
ADVERB
  1. in a conjugal manner
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How To Use connubial In A Sentence

  • But is not this much more agreeable and animated than the sweet dalliance of a sugar-plum life, or the dull, monotonous existence resembling a Dutch canal, which we term connubial happiness? The Black Baronet; or, The Chronicles Of Ballytrain The Works of William Carleton, Volume One
  • University officers and secret-society members, while its existence as a gazetteer was justified by a very few "connubial" items. The University of Michigan
  • Next in importance to the connubial is the convivial legislation of caste. India, Its Life and Thought
  • The poem's third stanza clinches the argument by celebrating the joy of connubial bliss,
  • We have long been derided and scoffed at for making connubialism marketable, and putting a price on a wife's infidelity, but it strikes me this is something worse; for what, after all, is a rib -- a false rib, too -- compared with the whole bony skeleton? Cornelius O'Dowd Upon Men And Women And Other Things In General
  • Just a few of the most famous objects, including the Euphronios krater stolen by tomb robbers and recovered three years ago from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Sarcophagus of the Spouses, an enchanting icon of connubial conviviality, rate display cases of their own. The Joy of Museums That Live in the Past
  • Just a few of the most famous objects, including the Euphronios krater stolen by tomb robbers and recovered three years ago from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Sarcophagus of the Spouses, an enchanting icon of connubial conviviality, rate display cases of their own. The Joy of Museums That Live in the Past
  • The and advances the problems that are needed in the determination the connubial loyalty agreement.
  • How honest Charles was in such professions, and what was the kind of connubial happiness which he was preparing for his bride, is shown by the fact that he was even now spending all his time with Lady Castlemaine; and, to reconcile her to his marriage with Catharine, he had promised her that he would make her one of the ladies of the queen's bed chamber as soon as she arrived in London, which would give him constant opportunities of being in her society. History of King Charles the Second of England
  • Society—family, tribe, caste, church, village, probate court—established and enforced its connubial protocols for the presumed good of everyone, except maybe for the couples themselves.
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