English
Noun
bride price (plural bride prices)
- In some cultures, a sum of money or other valuables paid by a bridegroom or on his behalf to the family of the bride.
1937, Grace Crowfoot, “Custom and Folk Tale in Palestine. The Dowry or Bride Price,”, in Folklore, volume 48, number 1, page 31:It is well known in Artas as in other villages exactly what the bride price should customarily be—so much for a cousin bride, so much more for a village bride, more still for a stranger.
2017 January 4, Liu Zhen, “Don’t pay over 60,000 yuan for a bride, say Chinese officials”, in South China Morning Post[1], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 05 January 2017, China[2]:Taiqian county in Henan province has issued guidelines saying grooms should pay no more than 60,000 yuan (HK$67,000) as a “bride price”, the Chinese tradition that a male partner offers money to his fiancée’s family to secure their marriage.
2018 November, Lucy Moore, “Founding Mothers”, in Literary Review:Their fares across the Atlantic were paid on the understanding that when they married, their Virginian husbands would pay a bride price for them of 150 pounds of tobacco, then worth about £22 (perhaps seven years’ salary for a domestic maid).
Synonyms
Translations
sum paid to the family of the bride
- Acehnese: jeunamè
- Amharic: ማጫ (mač̣a)
- Arabic: صَدَاق m (ṣadāq)
- Armenian: կալան (hy) (kalan)
- Azerbaijani: başlıq (az)
- Banjarese: jujuran (bjn)
- Bashkir: ҡалым (qalım)
- Belarusian: ве́на n (vjéna)
- Bulgarian: вено́ n (venó), ве́но n (véno)
- Chechen: там (tam) (for wedding), урдо (urdo) (for divorce)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 彩禮 / 彩礼 (zh) (cǎilǐ), 聘禮 / 聘礼 (zh) (pìnlǐ), 財禮 / 财礼 (zh) (cáilǐ)
- Czech: věno (cs) n
- Danish: brudepris c, brudesum c
- Dutch: buidsprijs m
- Estonian: mõrsjaluna
- Finnish: morsiuslunnaat (fi) pl
- French: prix de la fiancée m
- Galician: dote (gl) m
- German: Brautpreis (de) m, Brautgeld n
- Hebrew: מֹהַר (he) m (mohar)
- Indonesian: mahar (id)
- Ingush: урдув (urduv)
- Italian: prezzo della sposa m
- Kannada: ಕನ್ಯಾಶುಲ್ಕ (kanyāśulka)
- Kazakh: қалың (qalyñ), қалың мал (qalyñ mal)
- Korean: 신붓값 (sinbutgap)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: qelen (ku)
- Kyrgyz: калың (ky) (kalıŋ), калың мал (kalıŋ mal)
- Malay: mahar (ms)
- Maori: kaireperepe
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: brudepris m
- Nynorsk: brudepris m
- Old East Slavic: вѣно n (věno)
- Ossetian: ирӕд (iræd)
- Persian: شیربها (fa) (širbahâ)
- Polish: wiano (pl) n
- Portuguese: dote (pt) m, preço de noiva m
- Russian: ве́но (ru) n (véno) (historical), калы́м (ru) m (kalým) (usually of Russian Muslims but also some areas in Siberia), вы́куп (ru) m (výkup) (also: "ransom")
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: вѐно n, вијѐно n
- Roman: vèno n, vijèno n
- Shona: roora
- Slovak: veno n
- Spanish: dote (es) f, prebenda (es) f
- Sundanese: mahar (su)
- Swahili: mahari (sw)
- Swedish: brudpris (sv) n, the transaction: brudköp (sv) n
- Tajik: ширбаҳо (širbaho)
- Tatar: калым (tt) (qalım)
- Telugu: కన్యాశుల్కం (te) (kanyāśulkaṁ)
- Thai: สินสอด (th) (sǐn-sɔ̀ɔt)
- Turkish: başlık (tr), kalın (tr), başlık parası (tr)
- Turkmen: galyň
- Ugaritic: 𐎎𐎅𐎗 (mhr)
- Ukrainian: віно́ n (vinó)
- Uzbek: qalin (uz), mahr (uz), qalin puli
- Welsh: pris priodferch m
- Yakut: сулуу (suluu)
|
References