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See also: reverse-dowry

English

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Noun

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reverse dowry (plural reverse dowries)

  1. A sum of money or other valuables paid by a bridegroom or on his behalf to the family of the bride, in some cultures.
    • 1978, Carol Meyers, “The Roots of Restriction: Women in Early Israel”, in The Biblical Archaeologist, volume 41, number 3, page 98:
      This bride-gift, a kind of reverse dowry, indicates that grooms had to compete for relatively few brides.
    • 1991 September 16, Ned Zeman, “Houston's Sleazy Saga”, in Newsweek:
      Doug's mother, Lynn Sakowitz Wyatt, reveals that before her father, Bernard, would allow her to marry Coastal Corp. chairman Oscar Wyatt, he negotiated a reverse dowry giving him $1 million in corporate stock.

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