enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Marital breakdown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marital_breakdown

    It is the breach of domestic anticipation, often leading to a divorce or dissolution of the marital relationship. Often there are children, in-laws, and other individuals involved in the process. At the end of the process, there may be no relationship left, or there may be a long-term relationship at a distance (see legal separation). Every ...

  3. Marriage dispute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marriage_dispute

    Marriage dispute may refer to disagreements, often legal, regarding marriage. Disputes may be personal, familial, cultural or social, religious, legal, political, as well as regarding individual marriages and their details.

  4. Forced marriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_marriage

    Marriage by abduction, also known as bride kidnapping, is a practice in which a man abducts the woman he wishes to marry. Marriage by abduction has been practiced throughout history around the world and continues to occur in some countries today, particularly in Central Asia, the Caucasus and parts of Africa. A girl or a woman is kidnapped by ...

  5. Morganatic marriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morganatic_marriage

    Morganatic marriage, sometimes called a left-handed marriage, [1] is a marriage between people of unequal social rank, which in the context of royalty or other inherited title prevents the principal's position or privileges being passed to the spouse, or any children born of the marriage. The concept is most prevalent in German-speaking ...

  6. Family estrangement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_estrangement

    Although the rejected party's psychological and physical health may decline, the estrangement initiator's may improve due to the cessation of abuse and conflict. [2] [3] The social rejection in family estrangement is the equivalent of ostracism which undermines four fundamental human needs: the need to belong, the need for control in social situations, the need to maintain high levels of self ...

  7. Sexless marriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexless_marriage

    Josephite marriage, a marriage sexless out of religious motivation. Marriage of convenience, a marriage for reasons other than love and commitment. Lavender marriage, a marriage concealing discriminated sexual orientation. Lesbian bed death, the concept that committed relationships between women have less sex the longer the relationship lasts.

  8. Non-monogamy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-monogamy

    They include a casual relationship, sometimes called friends with benefits, [60] which is a primarily physical relationship between two people with low expectations of commitment or emotional labor, and an open relationship (incl. open marriage), referring to one or both members of a committed (or married) couple have the express freedom to ...

  9. Marriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marriage

    In a small number of jurisdictions marriage relationships may be created by the operation of the law alone. [133] Unlike the typical ceremonial marriage with legal contract, wedding ceremony, and other details, a common-law marriage may be called "marriage by habit and repute (cohabitation)." A de facto common-law marriage without a license or ...