You say congratulations to the groom and best wishes to the bride
Traditionally, congratulations are to the groom for his supposed " prize " . Bride gets best wishes.
um... I'm no wedding expert, but you could just say 'congratulations, and you may now kiss the bride.' or something.
Yes!
Congratulations!
there are many ways that you could put this. i agree on bride to groom if they were the only choices. the only reason that i say this is because the brides father has to give the bride away to the groom. so i would say bride to groom but other than if there was maybe another choice it would be bride and groom.
* The bride and groom say exchange their vows in front of the altar.
i do
No, the bride and groom do not repeat the ring vows together. The Minister will eventually say (and you repeat after him) 'With this ring I thee wed.' The Groom will start first and say his vows and then the Bride will follow suit.
he says hi
We cantaloupe
When introducing the bride and groom for their first dance say 'Ladies and Gentlemen, please stand and applaud for the first dance of Mr. & Mrs. John Doe.
Yes!
They would probably say * you may kiss the groom They would probably say * you may kiss the groom
To one person: Hongera arusi yenu To two or more: Hongereni arusi yenu Bride is Bibi Arusi Groom is Bwana Arusi Ndoa is marriage, and arusi is wedding. Hongera (pl. hongereni) is the general word for congratulations: on a birth, success in exams, confirmation, engagement, victory in a game, etc.
A labola is an arranged payment between a groom and the bride's family in exchange for their daughter. The payment may be cash or cattle or what ever valuable the groom has to pay for his bride. Labola is a way for the groom to say 'thanks for raising a good daughter.' It is an action in mostly South Africatraditional weddings.