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Marriage in South Korea is currently restricted to unions between individuals of the opposite sex as same-sex marriages remain unrecognized. [9] People over 18 years old may marry with their parents' or guardians' consent. [10] Otherwise South Korea's age of consent to marriage is 20 in Korean age (19 in international age).
Pyebaek table. Pyebaek (Korean: 폐백) is a Korean wedding custom that is traditionally held a few days after the official ceremony, with only family members present. [citation needed] The ceremony begins with the older couple seated on cushions behind a table in front of a painted screen, with the newlyweds opposite them.
The groom presents to his bride a white cloth which in turn is presented to the bride's mother. This is an expression of the groom's gratitude to his mother-in-law. The bride's mother will then present a plate of milk rice specially cooked for the occasion to the bride who feeds a portion to the groom. The groom then feeds the bride.
“The mother of the bride or groom would never throw the wedding shower. Now it’s okay,” acknowledged one reader. ... or mothers-in-law-to-be. Regardless of who’s hosting, if you’re ...
This can be the bride's mother, mother-in-law, the bridesmaids or other friends or family members. Girls Party. ... There's no hard-and-fast wedding gift etiquette when it comes to dollar amounts ...
Na-eun and her parents are happy until they see the tag which reads 20,000,000 won. The next morning, Na-eun's mother gives her a bank book showing the balance being 50,000,000 won to spend it all on wedding gifts. Na-eun visits Jun-hyung’s parents’ apartment. There she follows her mother-in-law to the kitchen to help her.
A woman is reflecting on hurtful actions from her mother-in-law, including asking women to wear white dresses to her wedding and excluding her from family photos
The groom and the bride bows to each other and shares rice wine in a decorated gourd cup. Foods prepared by the bride's family for the groom's parents are called pyebaek. Chestnuts and jujubes are offered to the groom's father, and pyeonpo (Korean steamed beef patty), yukpo (Korean beef jerky), and braised chicken to the mother.