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View synonyms for dowry

dowry

[ dou-ree ]

noun

, plural dow·ries.
  1. Also the money, goods, or estate that a wife brings to her husband at marriage.
  2. Archaic. a widow's dower.
  3. a natural gift, endowment, talent, etc.


dowry

/ ˈdaʊərɪ /

noun

  1. the money or property brought by a woman to her husband at marriage
  2. (esp formerly) a gift made by a man to his bride or her parents
  3. Christianity a sum of money required on entering certain orders of nuns
  4. a natural talent or gift
  5. obsolete.
    a widow's dower


dowry

  1. Money, property, or material goods that a bride's family gives to the bridegroom or his family at the time of the wedding. In many cultures , the dowry not only helps to cement the relationship between the bride's and groom's families but also serves to reinforce traditional family roles and gender roles .


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Word History and Origins

Origin of dowry1

First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English dowerie, from Anglo-French douarie, from Medieval Latin dōtārium. See dot 2, -ary

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Word History and Origins

Origin of dowry1

C14: from Anglo-French douarie, from Medieval Latin dōtārium; see dower

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Example Sentences

In 2016, when she got married herself, what she wanted for her dowry was an AC and a refrigerator.

After his father’s health deteriorated, Faruqui assumed still greater responsibilities—his three sisters had to be married, and weddings meant dowries.

From Time

I found that these women often give consent to these marriages to escape poverty and the burden of dowry.

Assam and West Bengal, meanwhile, are known as “source states” – localities struggling with poverty, the aftermath of natural disasters and the burden of the dowry system.

Each successful hit contributes to a virtual “anti dowry fund.”

Once the dowry has been cashed, there is no financial reason to keep the wife around.

The woman is a commodity to make money—the dowry becomes a business transaction.

The full document is quoted in a new book by Avi Raz, The Bride and the Dowry, complete with the typing errors I then made.

The groom has to give the bride a dowry to make the contract valid, and that dowry is for her and her alone to use as she wishes.

He tried to marry his daughter without a dowry to some man who was intoxicated with nobility.

In 1838 he married the daughter of Moreau (de l'Oise), who brought him a very large dowry.

Give them a suitable dowry, take care of them, and speak to them always like a friend.

This money she used as a dowry and it aided in consummating her marriage with Cerizet.

Her family—that of the bourgeoisie of Nancy—fooled Castanier about the size of her dowry and her "expectations."

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