English

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Etymology

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From Latin sponsalis, from sponsus (a betrothal), from spondere, sponsum (to betroth). See spouse, and compare espousal, spousal.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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sponsal (not comparable)

  1. (obsolete) Relating to marriage, or to a spouse; spousal.
    • 1870, Lorenzo Altisonant [Samuel Klinefelter Hoshour], Letters to Squire Pedant in the East, 4th Edition, page 64,
      The sponsal munities I claim are the postnate: To be autocratix in the culinary department, synarchist in other departments of the domicile, and adespotic alibi; and to commonstrate the bairns not to be solifidians, nor nullifidians.
    • 1963 January, The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, volume 25, Catholic Biblical Association of America, page 455:
      Boniface Llamera, St. Joseph (Herder, 1961), better preserves the primary character of the sponsal relationship when he writes: "The entire theology of St. Joseph (Josephology) has one first and principal basis: the marriage which united him to Mary."
    • 1993, Liam Gavin, transl., edited by Michel Forsé, Jean-Pierre Jaslin, Yannick Lemel, Henri Mendras, Denis Stoclet, and Jean-Hugues Déchaux, Recent Social Trends in France, 1960-1990, McGill-Queen's University Press, page 70:
      This leads to diversity in the types of sponsal relationships.

Synonyms

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Anagrams

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