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词汇 bigamy
释义

Definition of bigamy in English:

bigamy

noun ˈbɪɡəmiˈbɪɡəmi
mass noun
  • The offence of marrying someone while already married to another person.

    重婚罪

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Adultery, bigamy, and desertion were acceptable legal grounds.
    • Well, for instance, bigamy is a federal offence, and I have little doubt that the Commonwealth could prohibit people calling themselves married.
    • In 1882 Congress passed a law making bigamy a federal crime.
    • Sharpe on the other hand was recorded as marrying legally in November 1990 before committing her first offence of bigamy the following May.
    • Within a year the resulting notoriety provoked the newly crowned James I to promulgate an Act that made bigamy a felony.
    • In July, 1968, he appeared in court for bigamy, larceny and false pretences, with 116 offences considered, and was sentenced to two years jail, suspended for three years.
    • During his days in court, the criminal past of the self-confessed liar and philanderer emerged, with offences of bigamy, theft, fraud and criminal damage, and a faked suicide among two changes of identity.
    • In fact, laws against bigamy, adultery, and adult incest might be defended in the interest of preventing harm to others.
    • Of course, Trudy turns to old reliable Norval, but even he's smart enough to realize it would be bigamy for her to marry again.
    • Police issued an arrest warrant for bigamy and John, who now lives on the Isle of Man, turned himself in last week.
    • She wanted adequate safeguards against dowry, bigamy, adultery, and apostasy in the new legislation.
    • For instance, is a marriage subsequent to a civil union bigamy?
    • For example, Denise Robins, a wildly successful Mills & Boon star of the 1930s, wrote of rape, abduction, bigamy, suicide, illegitimacy and divorce.
    • When she confronted him, ‘He told [her] that he was getting a pension and that he would give her one half of what he Recieved if she would not have him arrested for bigamy.’
    • Then in December 1999 the district attorney's office charged him with bigamy because he was legally married to another woman.
    • Federal and state laws against bigamy and polygamy reflect that tradition.
    • But marriage itself is largely a creature of legal rules precluding divorce and prohibiting bigamy.
    • But someone blew the whistle and Michael was arrested for bigamy and hauled before the courts.
    • She had been sentenced at Blackpool Magistrates' Court for an offence of bigamy committed in April 2002, which she admitted.
    • A man was charged with bigamy for being married to 17 wives.

Derivatives

  • bigamist

  • noun ˈbɪɡəmɪstˈbɪɡəməst
    • Even the Marquis himself does not know whether his son was legitimate or not; or whether his wife is a bigamist.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Some women, hearing nothing for years, assumed that they were widows and married again, only for their soldier husbands to return from the wars, rendering them unwitting bigamists.
      • But Margaret's husband had been a bigamist: did that disqualify her great-granddaughter?
      • Apparently the first wives of bigamists did not always care to chase down their absconding husbands.
      • Covered by a trail of new names, false claims, and new marital arrangements, deserters and bigamists often lurked just beyond the reach of the law.
  • bigamous

  • adjective ˈbɪɡəməsˈbɪɡəməs
    • But if the second marriage was bigamous and therefore invalid, then FPJ would be illegitimate and should follow his mother's, not his father's, citizenship.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • If a person attempted to remarry after obtaining an unrecognised foreign divorce - or a church nullity alone - the subsequent ‘marriage’ would be bigamous and void.
      • Most prosecutions for bigamy fail because the complainant does not have the proof of the bigamous marriage.
      • Rather, it only contains the usual bans on bigamous or incestuous marriage.
      • His entering into a second marriage without dissolving his first is a bigamous act under Australian law, a matter he was well aware of.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French bigamie, from bigame 'bigamous', from late Latin bigamus, from bi- 'twice' + Greek -gamos 'married'.

Rhymes

polygamy, trigamy

Definition of bigamy in US English:

bigamy

nounˈbɪɡəmiˈbiɡəmē
  • The act of going through a marriage ceremony while already married to another person.

    重婚罪

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For instance, is a marriage subsequent to a civil union bigamy?
    • But marriage itself is largely a creature of legal rules precluding divorce and prohibiting bigamy.
    • Well, for instance, bigamy is a federal offence, and I have little doubt that the Commonwealth could prohibit people calling themselves married.
    • Within a year the resulting notoriety provoked the newly crowned James I to promulgate an Act that made bigamy a felony.
    • Federal and state laws against bigamy and polygamy reflect that tradition.
    • She had been sentenced at Blackpool Magistrates' Court for an offence of bigamy committed in April 2002, which she admitted.
    • Then in December 1999 the district attorney's office charged him with bigamy because he was legally married to another woman.
    • In fact, laws against bigamy, adultery, and adult incest might be defended in the interest of preventing harm to others.
    • She wanted adequate safeguards against dowry, bigamy, adultery, and apostasy in the new legislation.
    • Sharpe on the other hand was recorded as marrying legally in November 1990 before committing her first offence of bigamy the following May.
    • When she confronted him, ‘He told [her] that he was getting a pension and that he would give her one half of what he Recieved if she would not have him arrested for bigamy.’
    • Adultery, bigamy, and desertion were acceptable legal grounds.
    • Of course, Trudy turns to old reliable Norval, but even he's smart enough to realize it would be bigamy for her to marry again.
    • Police issued an arrest warrant for bigamy and John, who now lives on the Isle of Man, turned himself in last week.
    • A man was charged with bigamy for being married to 17 wives.
    • But someone blew the whistle and Michael was arrested for bigamy and hauled before the courts.
    • In July, 1968, he appeared in court for bigamy, larceny and false pretences, with 116 offences considered, and was sentenced to two years jail, suspended for three years.
    • For example, Denise Robins, a wildly successful Mills & Boon star of the 1930s, wrote of rape, abduction, bigamy, suicide, illegitimacy and divorce.
    • During his days in court, the criminal past of the self-confessed liar and philanderer emerged, with offences of bigamy, theft, fraud and criminal damage, and a faked suicide among two changes of identity.
    • In 1882 Congress passed a law making bigamy a federal crime.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French bigamie, from bigame ‘bigamous’, from late Latin bigamus, from bi- ‘twice’ + Greek -gamos ‘married’.

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