dowry
noun
- money, goods, or estate that is given to a woman at the time of her marriage
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈdaʊəɹi/ / /ˈdaʊɹi/
noun
Etymology: From Middle English dowarye, dowerie, from Anglo-Norman dowarie, douarie, from Old French douaire, from Medieval Latin dōtārium, from Latin dōs. Doublet of dower.
- Payment, such as property or money, paid by the bride's family to the groom or his family at the time of marriage.
- Payment by the groom or his family to the bride's family.
“The family of the groom makes sure the new couple has a house to live in and land to cultivate; they will also pay for the dowry (crucial, for without dowry the new father has no rights over his children; Trouwborst 1962: 136ff.)”
- Inheritance from a deceased husband to his widow.
- A natural gift or talent.
- A large amount.
“But no palace had so fair a ceiling; for from the wooden beams were suspended a whole dowry of copper vessels—pails, cauldrons, water pots, of every colour from lustrous black to the palest pink.”
verb
Etymology: From Middle English dowarye, dowerie, from Anglo-Norman dowarie, douarie, from Old French douaire, from Medieval Latin dōtārium, from Latin dōs. Doublet of dower.
- To bestow a dowry upon.
“1976, Graham Anderson, Studies in Lucian's Comic Fiction, Page 19”