Marry in a sentence as a verb

From [1]:I have said "No" but being a Pakistani girl there's nothing I can do. I was even forced to marry that guy who is 15 years older than me.

Facebook reassures you that you dodged a bullet when you didn't marry your high school sweetheart.

Under traditional common law, a jilted bride could sue for breach of promise to marry.

And they often marry among each other to preserve their trust and dependency on each other.

In most societies we know of, however, men prefer to marry women who have never slept with anyone else.

Work as a bartender, play in a band, travel the world on the cheap, teach English abroad, date the kind of people you wouldn't marry.

Thankfully she was wise enough to marry a geek who promptly told her not to upgrade her iPhone 4S to iOS 6 and not to swap it out for an iPhone 5. In fact, not one person in my family will do either of those things.

If no luck after a long time, watch your peers rise to big places in corporates- marry a girl, have kids,send them to posh schools, have a car and live in a 80L 3BHK Flat.

A professional, educated guy will marry the receptionist if she's funny and hot.

But a professional, educated woman will rarely marry the maintenance guy.

The practice eventually declined not because of further legal changes—at present no states recognize the action for breach of promise to marry—but as a result of social changes.

" Women do prefer men who are tall, but you will not be asked to provide a copy of your last physical attesting to your height when meeting your bride-to-be's parents to discuss your intention to marry her.

Women largely prefer to marry salarymen, because salarymen mean material stability.

Even among the top 5% of my high school class, I knew people who turned down full tuition scholarships to the flagship state university because they wanted to follow God and marry a nice boy from their church, or needed to stay home to help care and provide for members of their family.

Marry definitions

verb

take in marriage

See also: conjoin espouse

verb

perform a marriage ceremony; "The minister married us on Saturday"; "We were wed the following week"; "The couple got spliced on Hawaii"

See also: splice