What's the difference between bigamy and polyandry?

Bigamy


Definition:

  • (n.) The offense of marrying one person when already legally married to another.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) On a day that a local newspaper claimed that a police warrant had been issued for his arrest on a charge of bigamy , Mandla was not to be seen.
  • (2) He has faced criticism during the Republican race for comments made in a 2003 interview that appeared to equate consensual homosexual acts with incest, bigamy or adultery – comments that outraged equality activists , even after Santorum said they had been misinterpreted .
  • (3) While the marriage act excludes the union of people on the grounds of age and bigamy, it does not rule out same-sex couples, said human rights lawyer Kate Eastman , acting for the ACT.
  • (4) In America there was one in the 1940s – Ida Lupino – who made rather good, often provocative low-budget movies about bigamy, social snobbery, ambition, the state of women, and she, interestingly, was born in this country and was lured to Hollywood as a young woman, where she was an established actor before she started directing.
  • (5) The 34-year-old from Cardiff was sentenced to 16 years in prison for charges including rape, bigamy, voyeurism and the new offence of forced marriage.
  • (6) The man admitted four counts of rape, forced marriage, bigamy and voyeurism.
  • (7) He has been sentenced to four years in prison for that crime, plus 16 years for rape, a year for bigamy and a year for voyeurism, all to run concurrently.
  • (8) There are reports that police want to charge him with bigamy and that he may be forced to reveal in court whether he has sold the TV rights to his grandfather's funeral.
  • (9) He was held over alleged crimes of bigamy and tax evasion but was released without charge.
  • (10) Reports then said he was being investigated for tax evasion, bigamy and spreading pornography online.
  • (11) Mandla has been dogged by allegations of bigamy and trying to sell the TV rights to his grandfather's funeral, which he vehemently denies.

Polyandry


Definition:

  • (n.) The possession by a woman of more than one husband at the same time; -- contrasted with monandry.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A 'low recurrence polyandry' is observed in the sperm dimorphic species D. affinis while a 'high recurrence polyandry' is observed in the sperm monomorphic species D. latifasciaeformis and D. littoralis.
  • (2) Type II is female-headed and daughters bring children into the household by de facto polyandry (41%), but sons formally weds monogamously.
  • (3) Mark you, I think you probably need plenty of money for polyandry.
  • (4) The results imply that tolerance by the national government of polyandry within certain minority groups (e.g.
  • (5) Type I households have as head a women whose husband either visits or lives with her but is not legally bound to her; it is de facto polyandry (26.7% of survey households).
  • (6) National government should practice tolerance of polyandry as an acid to the attainment of zero population growth.
  • (7) The phenomenon is not correlated with an unusually large degree of male parental investment, polyandry, greater aggressiveness in females than in males, greater development of weapons in females, female dominance, or matriarchy.
  • (8) The concern is that the nonHan might raise the national birth rate and reduce the proportion of Han, even though nonHan life expectancy is lower and there is practice of polyandry.
  • (9) The general practice of polyandry is described as a walking marriage where women control material resources.
  • (10) Discussion is provided on the polyandry found among villagers of Limi in the Highlands of Nepal and the Tre-ba of Central Tibet, where there is fraternal polyandry patriarchies, where fertility rates of these unions were not higher, and a sizeable fraction of women 20-49 were left without mates (31% in Limi and 29% in Dhinga).
  • (11) These include the male's greater aggressiveness, the preponderance of polygyny over polyandry, and differences in the antecedents of jealousy.
  • (12) Males in the three species are equally polygynous but females differ in the level of polyandry.
  • (13) The results indicate that polyandry, by a large number of males, is not a common phenomenon in M. rotundata bee species.
  • (14) 'obligatory' polyandry) should only result in sperm monomorphism irrespective of the absolute value of sperm length.
  • (15) The Musuo have practiced matrilineal polyandry since the Yuan dynasty (1271-1368 AD).
  • (16) Field studies of callitrichid species have reported a surprising degree of variation in the composition of social groups, some of which has been interpreted as evidence of 'cooperative polyandry' in recent reviews.
  • (17) Female mating bonds include long-term monogamy, serial monogamy, polyandry and promiscuity.
  • (18) Since reactivity to syphilis was associated with poverty, poor hygiene, polyandry, polygamy, and illiteracy, citizens living in Himachal Pradesh were at great risk of acquiring HIV from a foreigner.
  • (19) In Kerala state, India and among the Kandyan Sinhalese of Sri Lanka, polyandry may not increase the fertility of individual wives, and is economically resourceful.