English language

How to pronounce wedded in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms wed

Examples of wedded

wedded
If the penalty is abolished, will more people take the plunge into wedded bliss?
From the suntimes.com
But that argument is wedded to aging notions of product history and positioning.
From the washingtonpost.com
Traditionally, applications are wedded to specific servers and storage devices.
From the businessweek.com
Maybe wedded happiness is considered static, undramatic, a minuet of compromises.
From the time.com
He died in a plane crash 11 years later, and in 1998 she wedded Nelson Mandela.
From the time.com
Don't become so wedded to one plan that you don't even investigate other options.
From the ocregister.com
Garff is not wedded to any particular industry, but he intends to stay in Utah.
From the sltrib.com
In other paintings, the figure is intimately wedded to nature and the life cycle.
From the signonsandiego.com
In that church, he said, residents have been baptized, wedded and laid to rest.
From the news.enquirer.com
More examples
  • Having been taken in marriage
  • Wednesday: the fourth day of the week; the third working day
  • Marry: perform a marriage ceremony; "The minister married us on Saturday"; "We were wed the following week"; "The couple got spliced on Hawaii"
  • (wing) a movable organ for flying (one of a pair)
  • (wing) fly: travel through the air; be airborne; "Man cannot fly"
  • (wing) one of the horizontal airfoils on either side of the fuselage of an airplane
  • (A-wing) A-wings are fictional Rebel Alliance and New Republic starfighters in the Star Wars universe. They first appear in '''' and subsequently in the Star Wars Expanded Universe's books, comics, and games.
  • WING "ESPN 1410" is a commercial AM radio station in Dayton, Ohio operating with 5,000 watts at 1410 kHz with studios, offices and transmitter located on David Road in Kettering. It is the first (and oldest) full-time commercial radio station in Dayton. ...
  • A wing is a surface used to produce lift for flight through the atmosphere - or occasionally through another gaseous or fluid substance. Another word for an artificial wing is an airfoil, and airfoils always have a distinctive cross-sectional shape.