Spouse in a sentence as a noun

"Is this spouse really the best I can do?

If your spouse subtly treated you like **** every day, how long would your marriage last?

For comparison, if I find a spouse, it's likely I won't spend 25% of my life in their company.

It's also important to tell your spouse or whatever that you are going to spend time doing something away from them.

Not that every potential spouse is a "gold digger" but the people who are inclined to be one come out of the wood work apparently.

Having a supporting spouse, a couple of kids and a mortgage are enormously motivating so this should come as no surprise.

"I know that the time I spend away from work, particularly on my family -- my relationship with my spouse, with my kids -- ends up being the time that matters most in the long term.

As a 30-year old childless white man who left the games industry after a short 8 months in order to get married and spend time with my spouse, I can tell you that the assessment is fairly spot on. If you weren't putting in 12 hours daily, something was wrong with you and it was 'bad for team morale'.

I'd much rather have a comfortable living, travel the world and be optimistic that i will have no problems buying a nice house for me and my spouse/family if i need to/should i want to.

The story I've heard from founders who have families is that they have a savings from a previous business that they are tapping into to make up the difference, or their spouse is carrying the majority of the family burden.

We divided up responsibilities so 'I looked outward, and [my spouse] looked inward', meaning that I spent my time making sure that the relevant referrals happened, that medications were administered on time and on dose, and so on.

You should, however, pack your resume [+].America has a very low bankruptcy rate, principally because it is treated as a social sin somewhere between notoriously cheating on one's spouse or doing something really dastardly like backstabbing a company by quitting it.

", your boss is less likely to give you more work; your spouse is less likely to ask you to do more around the house; you're not going to feel as guilty about only seeing grandma once a year or refusing to help your friend move; you can feel a little better about yourself when a friend lands an awesome new job or plans a cool vacation and you haven't really done anything.

Spouse definitions

noun

a person's partner in marriage

See also: partner mate