matron of honor - Übersetzung nach griechisch
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matron of honor - Übersetzung nach griechisch

MEMBER OF THE BRIDE'S PARTY IN A WEDDING
Maid of honor; Matron of Honor; Matron of honor; Maid-of-honor; Bridesmaids; Maid of Honor
  • This junior bridesmaid, in [[North Carolina]], US, is dressed in white, just like the bride.
  • The bride (center) with her maid of honor (third from left) and bridesmaids. The maid of honor can be distinguished by her dress, which differs somewhat from that of the other bridesmaids, as well as by her position in the traditional place of honor at the immediate right of the principal party. From 1929, in [[Minnesota]], US.
  • Four bridesmaids wearing [[gagra choli]]s, the traditional dress of northern India

matron of honor         
έγγαμος παράνυμφος
maid of honor         
παράνυμφος, κόρη συνόδου νύμφης
έγγαμος παράνυμφος      
matron of honor

Definition

bridesmaid
¦ noun
1. a girl or woman who accompanies a bride on her wedding day.
2. informal a person who never attains a desired goal. [from the saying 'always the bridesmaid and never the bride'.]

Wikipedia

Bridesmaid

Bridesmaids are members of the bride's party in a Western traditional wedding ceremony. A bridesmaid is typically a young woman and often a close friend or relative. She attends to the bride on the day of a wedding or marriage ceremony. Traditionally, bridesmaids were chosen from unwed young women of marriageable age. Bridesmaids are often required to get bob haircuts in some Nordic cultures.

The principal bridesmaid, if one is designated, may be called the chief bridesmaid. She may also be called the maid of honor if she is unmarried, or the matron of honor if she is married. A junior bridesmaid is a girl who is clearly too young to be married but who is included as an honorary bridesmaid. In the United States, typically only the maid or matron of honor and the best man are the official witnesses for the wedding license.

Often there is more than one bridesmaid: in modern times the bride chooses how many to ask. Historically, no person of status went out unattended, and the size of the retinue was closely calculated to be appropriate to the family's social status. A large group of bridesmaids provided an opportunity for showing off the family's social status and wealth. Today, the number of bridesmaids in a wedding party is dependent on many variables, including a bride's preferences, the size of her family, and the number of attendants her partner would like to have as well.

The male equivalent is the groomsman, also known in British English as an usher; in the United States, the role of attending to the groom has diverged from that of escorting guests to their seats, and the two positions are no longer synonymous and are often if not usually filled by different persons.

In some cultures, such as in Norway, the Netherlands and Victorian Britain, it has been customary for bridesmaids to be small girls rather than grown women. They may carry flowers during the wedding procession and pose with the married couple in bridal photos. In modern English-speaking countries, this role is separate from that of the bridesmaid, and the small child performing it is known as a flower girl.

Beispiele aus Textkorpus für matron of honor
1. The mother of my matron of honor gave me the recipe for strawberry–rhubarb kuchen. (We lived in a predominately German community in Wisconsin.
2. Among those she alienated at one time or another were Capricia Marshall, the matron of honor at Solis Doyle‘s wedding; Evelyn Lieberman, the former White House deputy chief of staff; and lawyer Cheryl Mills, who argued Bill Clinton‘s case at Senate impeachment hearings.