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How To Use Marry In A Sentence

  • Marry that fat son of a fat cattle dealer? She would die first!
  • They are trying to marry together a number of scientific disciplines.
  • He shouldn't be courting her let alone possibly wanting to marry her.
  • Such a seemingly innocuous observation, yet as Logan evolves from student, to writer, to secret agent, to art gallery dealer, we see how it informs a kind of amorality in his character that propels him to sleep with his college mate's girlfriend and, later, the same man's wife, marry a woman he doesn't love and then push her aside when he meets the real love of his life. SFGate: Top News Stories
  • Even men who marry commoners are struggling to afford lobola, which has increased with the expectations of parents whose daughters are marrying into the mushrooming black middle class.
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  • In their pursuit of their rights, including to marry, they have been determined but have made their campaign fun, lively, colorful and open to others.
  • One should not marry bilateral kin up to the second degree of collaterality; spouses beyond the fourth degree of collaterality are preferred.
  • In economically advanced countries, women marry later.
  • Besides, he caused a general visitation to be made of all the land from Quito to Chile, registering the whole population for more than a thousand leagues; and imposed a tribute [_so heavy that no one could be owner of a_ mazorca _of maize, which is their bread for food, nor of a pair of_ usutas, _which are their shoes, nor marry, nor do a single thing without special licence from Tupac Inca. History of the Incas
  • I wouldn't marry you if you were the last person on earth!
  • Unfinished hems and bulky vertical exterior seams retained an air of elegance, their rough finish somehow marrying perfectly with the slinky lines of dresses and skirts. Times, Sunday Times
  • But sharper than all these impressions rang the words of the worldly-wise Higbee: _ "She's hunting night and day for a rich husband; she tries for them as fast as they come; she'd rather marry a sub-treasury -- she'd marry me in a minute -- she'd marry_ YOU; _but if you were broke she'd have about as much use for you .... The Spenders A Tale of the Third Generation
  • Lauren Bacall stars as Lucy, about to marry Kyle when Rock Hudson's Mitch professes his undying love.
  • Your father had agreed with the Prince's parents on marrying the both of you when the time was right.
  • They decided she was marrying beneath her.
  • Foreigners planning to marry Mexicans must first obtain permission from the Secretaria de Gobernación Office of Migración, providing the same documentation as well as a fee of $1723 pesos (about $191 USD). It Takes More Than "I Do" To Marry In Mexico
  • She wants to marry her daughter to that rich man.
  • Yet her role as a social exemplar has not received due attention; for instance, her refusal to marry.
  • Massachusetts today became the first state to allow gay and lesbian couples to marry.
  • She herself meant eventually to marry, because one couldn't forever hang on to rich people; but she was going to wait till she found some one who combined the maximum of wealth with at least a minimum of companionableness. The Glimpses of the Moon
  • Dark plums marry with purple sedum and rich pink hemerocallis along one border.
  • So I suppose it's no surprise that a May 7 press release from the the World Congress of Families (WCF), an extremely conservative group that "seeks to restore the natural family as the fundamental social unit and the 'seedbed' of civil society," accused CCF of wanting to '' de-institutionalize marriage "and of celebrating the fact" that an increasing number of women are choosing not to marry and have children. Stephanie Coontz: Unconventional Wisdom on Families
  • He wants to marry off his daughter to his partner's son.
  • IV. i.150 (473,2) 'Tis such another fitchew! marry, a perfum'd one] Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies
  • Pull yourself together and marry one of them. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mrs. Brown was anxious to marry off her five daughters.
  • My grandmother was agreeable to marrying Gaetano.
  • We plan to marry up with the other party of team on the other side of the mountain.
  • Marry your son when you will, your daughter when you can. 
  • She repeated several times that she didn't intend to marry.
  • His health being delicate, Sir Christopher is anxious for him to marry and so sends him off to Bath.
  • Mrs. Brown was anxious to marry off her five daughters.
  • The problem Austen isolates is what happens when women transform themselves into "objects of male desire" but lack the opportunity to marry: where does the energy go? 'Pleasure is now, and ought to be, your business': Stealing Sexuality in Jane Austen's _Juvenilia_
  • Marrying for sex is like flying to London for the free peanuts and pretzels. It's not the point of the thing, is it? Garrison Keillor 
  • Speculation was rife as to whom the prince might marry.
  • People really do still feel societal pressure to marry, and this is quite separate from religious pressure to marry.
  • If you have no intention of marrying her, you shouldn't keep leading her on.
  • The wise never marry, And when they marry they become otherwise.
  • His dilemma rests in the choice between telling a lie and losing his chance to marry the woman he loves.
  • It is harder to marry a daughter well than to bring her up well. 
  • No intelligent, nice young man in Chechnya would marry a nonvirgin girl," says Yusupova. Women of Al Qaeda
  • Carrie is living in a world in which if you have enough fashion sense, can aerobicize yourself to perfection and find the perfect apartment...you are beautiful enough to marry a prince. Sex And The City (2008)
  • The harlequin is enamoured of a young dancer who has been forced to marry the proprietor of the troupe.
  • They may, indeed, I deny not, marry if they will, and have free choice, some of them; but in the meantime their case is desperate, Lupum auribus tenent, they hold a wolf by the ears, they must either burn or starve. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Count Mirabeau is a most wonderful man, but he is a more than questionable character; even if you marry him, your discretion may very reasonably be called in question, but terms of intimacy, except with that view, cannot for a moment be tolerated; - to talk of friendship for such a man is nonsense, unless, like the good old duchess, you had had a tendresse for the father, which made you patronising for the son. Zoe: The History of Two Lives
  • When a man forbids his wife to marry again without losing what he leaves -- it's what I call selfishness after death. Mrs. Caudle's Curtain Lectures
  • When they embark upon marrying someone, they should do so with sincerity of purpose and with the intention of creating a harmonious relationship.
  • Marry, she can pluck a chick, and roll pastry, and use a bedstaff, and scour a floor, and sew, and the like. The White Rose of Langley A Story of the Olden Time
  • Marry your son when you will, your daughter when you . 
  • That weekend in Plattsburgh, he convinced her to go ahead and marry Bud.
  • Spurlock possessed a vigorous intellect, critical, disquisitional, creative; and yet he saw nothing remarkable in the girl's readiness to marry him! The Ragged Edge
  • The central two-hander is set among a group of friends, all of whom are married or about to marry.
  • He asked her to marry him but she turned him down.
  • But then it's not often that break-dancing, yoga and techno marry with traditional ballet and Tchaikovsky's score.
  • Maggie Keswick's family had been merchants in China for 150 years and, by marrying into the Jardine family, became taipans of the Jardine Matheson company - a corporation which virtually ran Hong Kong.
  • Does ta mind how tha towd me as he made light o 'me when th' lads an 'lasses plagued him, an' threeped 'em down as he didna mean to marry no such like lass as me -- him as wor ready to dee fur me? One Day at Arle
  • Her father wouldn't let her marry a wastrel.
  • He and his fiancée are marrying in a civil ceremony followed by a reception then a party, all at his old prep school. Times, Sunday Times
  • Marry, sir, the letter, very orderly; having nothing but the word 'noddy' for my pains. The Two Gentlemen of Verona
  • Marry a wife of thine own degree. 
  • The proportion of endogamous marriages among their 11 children was not as high as among their Burger (three of five marriages) and van Rensburg (five of seven marriages) cousins, but among the three van Heerdens who did marry van der Merwes, the practice of intermarriage remained strong across subsequent generations. Belongings: Property, Family, and Identity in Colonial South Africa
  • It deals with two women who reject their suitors because they've decided they want to marry men who are more fashionable, affected and accustomed to courtly manners.
  • Will the government's effort to marry off more low-income single parents ease poverty?
  • I will command him: Go and marry a harlot and beget the children of harlotry, and then I will tell him to send her and her children away. Gomer, daughter of Diblaim: Midrash and Aggadah.
  • `If you ask me," ventured Sloan consideringly, `it was more of a case of him not wanting to marry the boss's daughter. A DEAD LIBERTY
  • Report if he got to marry her does that mean i can marry albert wesker Video: man in Japan weds anime game character Boing Boing
  • About 75% of wedding ceremonies in the Unitarian church in Dublin are booked by young Catholics and divorcees who want to marry in a church setting.
  • Chanterelles are also fantastic in risottos and pasta dishes, and marry well with flat-leaf parsley or tarragon.
  • You will lose the dukedom if you marry this girl.
  • A woman who is so much exalted above what she can deserve, has reason to be terrified, were she to marry the complimenter (even could she suppose him so blinded by his passion as not to be absolutely insincere) to think of the height she must fall from in his opinion, when she has put it into his power to treat her but as what she is. Sir Charles Grandison
  • Hortensio desperately wants to marry Bianca; however, Baptista will not allow his younger daughter to marry any man before his older Katherine has first wed.
  • To marry a woman for her beauty is like buying a house for its paint. 
  • Their manner was to grant naturalization (which they called jus civitatis [the right of citizenship]), and to grant it in the highest degree; that is, not only jus commercii [the right to commercial trade], jus connubii [the right to intermarry], jus hæreditatis [the right of inheritance]; but also jus suffragii [the right of suffrage], and jus honorum [the right of holding office]. XXIX. Of the True Greatness of Kingdoms and Estates
  • We felicitated John on his engagement to marry.
  • Op Ed: Proscriptions on who may marry, such as preventing consanguine marriages, can be easily understood by referring to the procreative potential of marriage. Why are only queer rights on the chopping block?
  • Note 13: Patriliny requires that children born to a couple who marry formally (i.e. with full bridewealth paid, or in an official civil or church ceremony) take the xivongo of their father. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • Puli subprefect Hiyama Tetsusaburo was the first prominent Japanese official to marry into an Aborigine polity. Archive 2008-10-01
  • The process that the Waynes chose, called betrothal, requires a man and woman to make a binding commitment to marry before beginning any romantic -- much less physical -- relationship. It Takes More Than Two
  • You'll never marry her-she's much too good for you.
  • Marry, she says your dog was a cur, and tells you currish thanks is good enough for such a present. The Two Gentlemen of Verona
  • As a remedy for the violation, the courts ordered that gays and lesbians be given the right to marry.
  • A faded movie star is horrified when she discovers her trusted secretary is about to marry a gossip columnist. The Sun
  • Along the old lanes there is still the feeling of Nouvelle France, of fur-trappers and voyageurs, of hearty chaps in beaver hats and birch-bark canoes who disappeared into the interior to hunt, to fish and to marry Iroquois brides.
  • Many a tribe and ruling house has survived by intermarrying with its rivals,(Sentence dictionary) rather than waging war on them.
  • Just when her interest in Mark begins to emerge, he hooks up with the man-eating lawyer who is determined to marry him.
  • Traditionally, prior to marrying and beginning his adult life, a young man entered the sangha (the Buddhist monastic order) and spent time as a novice.
  • Do you want me to marry you and come to Iviza and look after you? 4.50 From Paddington
  • ‘Hm… maybe I should reconsider marrying into your family,’ Katrina teased back.
  • Fleur plays Princess Turandot, declaring that she will marry the man who correctly answers her three riddles, while those who fail will be killed.
  • Yet these were the years that most intrigued me; as I continued my research, I found out she may have had a broken romance with Prince Leopold of England but ended up marrying another man (while wearing a diamond brooch from the Prince on her wedding dress); as a mother, she suffered heartbreak during A Note about Alice I Have Been by author Melanie Benjamin
  • Probably more people would marry if the vows included `I don't think so. SUMMER OF SECRETS
  • But then Brooks’s counterfactual is pointless, because you can’t choose to marry someone you can be happy with. Matthew Yglesias » Eternal Recurrence
  • Marrying the two in a mutually beneficial collaboration seems a sensible solution and unlike most marriages, it needn't be expensive.
  • Could she possibly marry this boy whom her sentimental contemporaneousness with his father naturally seemed to relegate to a generation younger than herself? The Halo
  • Proscriptions on who may marry, such as preventing consanguine marriages, can be easily understood by referring to the procreative potential of marriage. Why are only queer rights on the chopping block?
  • If she is seriously ill, it would be kind of logical that he might someday remarry, but it is really tacky to have the subject come up during her lifetime, if it did. Evening Buzz: John Edwards’ Love Child?
  • A church organist has announced that she plans to marry a magic carpet fairground ride. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since most couples agree family life is the bedrock of society, why don't we bribe people to marry? The Sun
  • The wise never marry, And when they marry they become otherwise.
  • I'd like your permission to ask Silvia to marry me.
  • I will return, find you, love you, marry you and live without shame.
  • Instead, companies are looking to develop partnerships that marry the traditions of municipal and private project finance.
  • On learning the truth, she consents to receive the visit of Lara, an admirer of hers, whom she loves; and, when the Bluebeard, Valdini, surprises his victim and proceeds to the immurement, his first wife slips in most conveniently and whisks him off, leaving Valentine free to marry Balzac
  • 'I asked her to marry me.' 'You what?'
  • Nancy wondered whether it was her destiny to live in England and marry Melvyn.
  • he is my fiance, we will marry in March
  • They were a family line who seemed to have specialised in marrying well.
  • Because Dad left the tribe to marry an outsider, however, he was considered a pariah.
  • He was free to marry whomever he chose.
  • When women marry they often move over long distances into households where they are strangers.
  • However, by Christmas Miss Holland had reconsidered her position and decided she was too young to marry and settle down.
  • Mrs. Brown was anxious to marry off her five daughters.
  • His three daughters are giving him a headache, especially Maggie, the eldest, who humbles her father by marrying his chief bootmaker, Willie Mossop, and opening a rival shop.
  • Perhaps she only said yes because she knew that marrying into a family like the Lindons would help her and her sisters live a more comfortable life, free of money worries.
  • This arrangement also protected the husband; should he die, his merry widow could never marry her amico. If He Has A Mistress, Why Can't She Have...A Mister?
  • We have lived together now for a little more than a year and plan to marry as soon as we can pay for the wedding and reception that we both want.
  • Yet, despite the involvement and money of the LGBT lobbyists, including the omnipresent Human Rights Campaign, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and the Freedom to Marry Coalition, the marriage tit-for-tat continues in Albany. Adrian Margaret Brune: The New Gay Guerrillas
  • While priests were denied the right to marry and procreate, he said, their situation would remain impossible.
  • Encountering him there, Dinah calmly tells him that she can not do without him-it is the divine will that they marry.
  • People in higher social classes are more likely to marry late .
  • It was a politics that rejected as falsely optimistic (if not self-interested) approaches like Stephen's, which posited women's sexual consent and consent to marry as sufficiently unproblematic, and the sexes 'common interest in revitalization of Spirit as sufficiently strong, to permit immediate resolution of sex-class conflict through communal cooperation and the sacralization of feminine nurture. 47 Manhood in the Age of Aquarius: Masculinity in Two Countercultural Communities, 1965–83
  • Marry your son when you will, your daughter when you . 
  • I'm against premarital sex, so I never intend to marry any girl who sleeps with me.
  • She then strikes a bargain with a priest who, although not in the habit of marrying tinkers, says he'll do the job for a small fee and a tin can.
  • In their pursuit of their rights, including to marry, they have been determined but have made their campaign fun, lively, colorful and open to others.
  • She had promised to marry him, but took fright at the last moment.
  • Marry a wife of thine own degree. 
  • It is enough that “my lud” has a handle to his name, and Murray Hill shoddyocracy will wine and dine and toady him, and perhaps for his title marry him to some sweet, pure and good American girl, whose life hereafter will be a purgatory to herself and a mutual misery to both. Black and White
  • Look at the Closet scene: Hamlet has just killed a man, Polonius, yet he heaps reproaches upon his mother's head for daring to re-marry.
  • MacDermott had fallen in love with a girl who had preferred to marry a peeler ... _a peeler_, mind you! ... they would split their sides laughing. The Foolish Lovers
  • A consequence of the Hindu diaspora is an increased number of Hindus marrying outside their community, as subsequent generations become more and more identified with their new country.
  • I also got down on one knee and asked her to marry me again. Times, Sunday Times
  • Can or should you get the boot for marrying my kind of gurl? LUKE IS BACK
  • The design of the proposed development would marry the old building to the new and all entertaining would be done in the chancery.
  • Junior officers in the British army require their commanding officer's permission to marry or they are obliged to resign their commission.
  • Robert was succeeded by his sons Roger and William, to whose dominion not only was Naples added, but all the places interjacent as far as Rome, and afterward Sicily, of which Roger became sovereign; but, upon William going to Constantinople, to marry the daughter of the emperor, his dominions were wrested from him by his brother Roger. The History of Florence
  • He guessed she couldn't bear to have his everlastin 'whiteweed seedin' itself into her hayfield, an 'the only way she could stop it was to marry him an' weed it out. Ladies-In-Waiting
  • A second report from the institute looked at whether people aged 50 and above were likely to remarry after divorce or the death of their partner. Times, Sunday Times
  • The play scoffs at citizens like Gertrude who marry above their station; at wannabe gallants like Quicksilver the apprentice; and at ‘false’ gentlemen such as the new-made knight Sir Petronel Flash.
  • Because of her beauty, she has managed to marry above her.
  • I had always been emphatic that I didn't know whom I would marry, but one thing was for sure --he would not be a farmer or dairyman!
  • It then only became necessary to convey to these worthy people the idea of remarrying Therese, and particularly to make them believe that this idea originated with themselves, and was their own. Theresa Raquin
  • Again, he vows to do penance by marrying Elizabeth and accepting her illegitimate son.
  • Many a woman's mother has suggested that it is a good idea to marry a man who loves you more than you love him.
  • However the marrying of one subnet per wiring closet is problematic.
  • Living together before you marry is no guarantee of future happiness.
  • The fact remains that many tend to marry people like themselves, especially when it comes to social rank.
  • Olga predicated that it would him and myself who would marry well into St Petersburg society.
  • It is intrinsically unlikely that governments know how to encourage couples to marry. Times, Sunday Times
  • As my father never spoke of his life before marrying, and for truth said hardly a word regarding anything at all, I did not know his history before he plied his trade as farmer in Billerica. Excerpt: The Heretic's Daughter by Kathleen Kent
  • Marrying Marguerite would provide him the perfect pretext for releasing the infanta from this pledge. A Friday Snippet
  • She repeated several times that she didn't intend to marry.
  • She needs a special dispensation to marry her cousin.
  • I have no desire to marry my younger man. The Sun
  • The man who is not currently a fornicator can only marry a woman who is not currently a fornicatress or a chaste woman from the people of the Book. Ave Sharia
  • He must be extra special, because he is marrying a lovely girl.
  • Marry in lent, and you’ll live to repent. 
  • I think there's a feeling that there's a great weight off his shoulders and at long last that whole issue of whether to marry her and so on has been sorted out.
  • Who knows? If you play your cards right , maybe he'll marry you.
  • He purposed that he would marry after graduation.
  • I later discover that chilled Greek salad and warm pan gravy with scrapings marry quite well.
  • Paul is engaged to marry Karen, who is the perfect woman.
  • The New York Times spun potentially good news – women are earning more – into an androcentric tale of female victimhood: mean are marrying women for their money. “Crying Girl” DVD makes me cry, but not for the obvious reason « Gender Across Borders
  • Du'in 'the month thet he's showed signs o' keepin 'comp'ny with me - which he has acchilly asked me to marry him - he' ain't said the first word sech ez you'd expect of a co'tin 'widower, exceptin' one. In Simpkinsville : character tales,
  • She needs a special dispensation to marry her cousin.
  • It would be a crime -- a _crime_ -- to marry him," she said, with Helbeck of Bannisdale — Volume II
  • And before they vote at church synods on such issues as allowing divorcees to remarry at Anglican altars they must have watched it for six months, he declares.
  • After remarrying, her first husband claimed they had never been divorced.
  • Surely, it immediately seems ironic they should want to marry, when it is a religious ceremony, being blessed under God.
  • Or the board might transfer or dismiss an administrator for marrying a teacher.
  • No scutage nor aid shall be imposed on our kingdom, unless by common counsel of our kingdom, except for ransoming our person, for making our eldest son a knight, and for once marrying our eldest daughter; and for these there shall not be levied more than a reasonable aid. The Magna Carta
  • Around about the time my then-new-boyfriend, now husband, said - only half-joking - he wouldn't entertain the idea of marrying someone if they wouldn't take his name. Carla Buzasi: A Woman's Right to Choose (Her Surname, at the Very Least)
  • Honest men marry soon, wise men not at all. 
  • Can you marry up the two halves of the broken plate?
  • Marry ofter winks at the spelling mistakes in her homework.
  • Marriage may not be always be fashionable, yet empirical evidence shows that couples who marry are more likely to enjoy durable relationships than cohabiting couples. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rules banning divorced people from remarrying in church were revoked yesterday by the Church of England.
  • The map shows the route from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey, where the couple are to marry April 29. Royal wedding procession route mapped
  • He finally plucked up courage to ask her to marry him.
  • Everyman should marry. After all, happiness is not the only thing in life.
  • Small wonder that the Stones were marketed from the very start as "the anti-Beatles," the boys you must never let your daughters marry (and who will, on occasion, resemble your daughters). Keith Richards's 'Life': An unexpectedly clear look at years as a Rolling Stone
  • But their children made it up by intermarrying and dividing the island between them. Good-bye, Jack
  • If farmers' sons did not marry within their own class, they were most likely to marry the daughter of a crofter or farm worker.
  • My friend on the other hand, is very broody and wants to go to university to find a nice man to marry and have children with and that is her principal aim (of course she also wants the degree and the experience, but she very much wants a man).
  • King Edward Ⅷ abdicated in 1936 to marry a commoner.
  • Or the board might transfer or dismiss an administrator for marrying a teacher.
  • Yes, I will marry you.
  • I'm not sure if I want to marry her.
  • Yes, you are forewarned, the secretaries -- all women, natch -- in the corporate world of this historical artifact of 1961 want nothing more than to marry and spend their lives in one of the snazzier suburbs. Monica Edinger: Top Ten Reasons to See How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying
  • You may love someone without necessarily wanting to marry them.
  • His undesiring sighting of her body achieved the same effect for her as his desirous vision of Robinson: Caroline is disarticulated from the body/property scheme so necessary to the realism of sentimental narratives (to which the prince was himself addicted, believing Maria Fitzherbert to be his soulmate from whose bosom he had been torn by parental pressure to marry against his nature). Framing Romantic Dress: Mary Robinson, Princess Caroline and the Sex/Text
  • I've seen widows forced to marry unwanted suitors who, aided and abetted by the law, usurped their deceased husband's assets, as well as their own lives and bodies.
  • She was my mother's mother, a proud, snooty woman who had never really forgiven my mom for marrying my dad.
  • Because marriage figures so prominently in her novels, much has been made of Austen's decision not to marry.
  • He ended up marrying his high school sweetheart
  • She says there was an instant spark between them - now they are set to marry. The Sun
  • Do you want to marry a woman who can say such hurtful things and then not reassure you? The Sun
  • If that's a success, she can divorce her husband and marry you. Times, Sunday Times
  • If the casket he chose contained the portrait, he could marry Portia; if not, he would be compelled to leave and never woo another woman again.
  • The relatively recent controversial permissions to remarry the divorced and make women presbyters arguably had biblical warrant, though minorities disputed this.

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