newlywed

[ UK /njˈuːlɪwˌɛd/ ]
[ US /ˈnuɫiˌwɛd/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone recently married
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How To Use newlywed In A Sentence

  • The groom's brother douses the newlyweds with flower petals at the end of the ceremony.
  • However, the very next day she was besieged with complaints from her disappointed newlyweds, and conceded the great wisdom needed for making a match that leads to a happy marriage.
  • (a newlywed in Much Ado About Nothing), spelled benedict or benedick, is a ` newly married man, in particular, one who had a long bachelorhood. ' VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIII No 3
  • A fellow's salary is no princely sum, and in 1965 foreign holidays were still relatively unusual, so the newlyweds honeymooned in Suffolk for a week.
  • Meanwhile, a pair of Hampshire newlyweds who were honeymooning in the Maldives have assured their families they are safe and well.
  • Chinese couples had stampeded to get hitched before the Year of the Horse started last week, spooked by a cosmological sign that the coming lunar year bodes ill for newlyweds.
  • And plan to fall in this one transition, catch shrimp to already began recruit newlywed person.
  • And plan to fall in this one transition, catch shrimp to already began recruit newlywed person.
  • The piper collaborated with a group of dhol drummers as the newlyweds entered the reception. Times, Sunday Times
  • But the aforementioned compositions do not capture the roughhewn joy of newlyweds, the married couple of fifty years, and those who have transitioned from tempestuous waters to calmer seas in matrimony. Andrew Wilkes: Appreciation For The 'Sacred Dance' Of Marriage
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