- for "betrothal";
sanctification or dedication, also
called erusin) and
nissuin (marriage), is when the
couple start their life together. It is at the...
- A
seudat nissuin (Hebrew, lit. 'wedding feast' or 'marriage supper') is a
seudat mitzvah that
observant Jews eat
after a
Jewish wedding. It is a mitzvah...
- (Hebrew: שבע ברכות; literally, "the
seven blessings"), also
known as
birkot nissuin (Hebrew: ברכות נישואין; literally, "the
wedding blessings") in Halakha...
-
Retrieved 2023-12-21. wiktionary:בהצלחה
Rabbi Daniel Gordis (2003-07-30). "
Nissuin: The
Second of the Two Ceremonies". myjewishlearning.com.
Retrieved 2021-05-09...
- the
ability to say
blessings – Brachot.
During the
festive meal,
seudat nissuin following a
Jewish wedding,
guests parti****te in the
mitzvah (commandment)...
-
sacramental marriage in
Christianity (especially Catholicism),
nikah in Islam,
nissuin in Judaism, and
various other names in
other faith traditions, each with...
- the term,
which is the
first part of marriage, the
second part
being the
nissuin "nuptials".
Since the
Middle Ages it is
customary for the
marriage to occur...
- apart; the
bride lived with her
parents until the
actual marriage ceremony (
nissuin),
which would take
place in a room or tent that the
groom had set up for...
-
Archived from the
original on
September 4, 2008.
Retrieved July 3, 2008. "
Nissuin: The
Second of the Two Ceremonies".
Archived from the
original on November...
- and
traditionally read out loud
under the
chuppah between the
erusin and
nissuin.
Friends or
distant relatives are
invited to
witness the ketubah, which...