MARRIAGE

     
Marriage is a governmentally, socially, or religiously recognized interpersonal relationship, usually intimate and sexual, and often created as a contract.[1] The most frequently occuring form of marriage is between a woman and a man, where the feminine term wife and the masculine husband may be used to describe them.[2][3] Other forms of marriage also exist. For example, polygamy, in which a person takes more than one spouse, is present in many societies' traditions.[4] Also, beginning in 2001, the legal concept of marriage has been expanded to include same-sex marriage in some areas.[5]

The reasons people marry vary widely, usually including: the public declaration of love, the formation of a family unit, legitimizing sexual relations and procreation, social and economic stability, and the education and nurturing of children.[6][7]

A marriage can be declared by a wedding ceremony,[8] which may be performed either by a religious officiator or through a similar government-sanctioned secular process. The act of marriage often creates obligations between the individuals involved, and in many societies their extended families [citation needed]. Marriages are perpetual agreements with legal consequences, terminated only by the death of one party or by formal dissolution processes such as divorce and annulment.


 

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