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Affinity&_160;· Attachment&_160;· Bonding &_160;· Boyfriend&_160;· Casual&_160;· Cohabitation &_160;· Compersion &_160;· Concubinage &_160;· Consort&_160;· Courtesan &_160;· Courtship &_160;· Divorce&_160;· Domestic partnership &_160;· Dower&_160;/ Dowry&_160;/ Bride price &_160;· Family&_160;· Friendship&_160;· Girlfriend &_160;· Husband&_160;· Infatuation&_160;· Intimacy &_160;· Jealousy&_160;· Limerence&_160;· Love &_160;· Marriage &_160;· Monogamy &_160;· Psychology of monogamy &_160;· Serial monogamy&_160;· Nonmonogamy &_160;· Passion&_160;· Pederasty &_160;· Platonic love &_160;· Polyamory &_160;· Polyfidelity &_160;· Polygamy &_160;· Relationship abuse &_160;· Relationship breakup &_160;· Romance &_160;· Romantic friendship &_160;· Separation &_160;· Sexuality &_160;· Same-sex relationship &_160;· Significant other &_160;· Soulmate &_160;· Teen dating violence &_160;· Wedding &_160;· Widowhood &_160;· Wife &_160;· The term "morning gift" derives from the Germanic practice of the bridegroom's officially granting the gift on the morning after the wedding night; making such a settlement was evidence that the marriage had been consummated and the bride had proven to be a virgin. However, in popular parlance, the term may be used for a life interest in property settled by a husband on his wife at any time, not just at the wedding. The verb is to dower (dower, dowers, dowered). In popular usage, the term dower may be confused with Being for the widow and being accorded by law, dower differs essentially from a conventional marriage portion such as the dos of the old Roman law, the French dot, or the English dowry.
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