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common-law marriage
noun
- a marriage without a civil or ecclesiastical ceremony, generally resulting from an agreement to marry followed by the couple's living together.
common-law marriage
- A legal marriage brought about by the cohabitation of a man and a woman, or by their agreement to consider themselves married, rather than by a wedding. ( See common law .)
Word History and Origins
Origin of common-law marriage1
Example Sentences
And if people think common-law marriage is a good alternative, think again.
But soon after, Ambar said, officers learned that the couple were in a registered common-law marriage and that he was her daughter’s stepfather.
He married four times, always to dancers, and lived with a fifth in a common-law marriage.
The new definition contrasts with the state’s former standard, established in 1987, which suggested judges should consider several specific markers to establish a common-law marriage.
The Japan Federation of Bar Associations has rejected the position, and in September, a local court became the first in Japan to recognize two people of the same sex as being in a common-law marriage.
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