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dowry

noun

  1. money, goods, or estate that is given to a woman at the time of her marriage
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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.

  1. Payment, such as property or money, paid by the bride's family to the groom or his family at the time of marriage.
  2. 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.)

  3. Inheritance from a deceased husband to his widow.
  4. A natural gift or talent.
  5. 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.

  1. To bestow a dowry upon.

    1976, Graham Anderson, Studies in Lucian's Comic Fiction, Page 19