What's the difference between recarriage and remarriage?
Recarriage
Definition:
(n.) Act of carrying back.
Example Sentences:
Remarriage
Definition:
(n.) A second or repeated marriage.
Example Sentences:
(1) Because there is a growing interest in remarriage and the new types of families this social phenomenon creates, we became convinced that the meager number of articles and books in this area would be of interest to others.
(2) The likelihood for men to remarry is approximately five to six times higher and can be best interpreted as a reflector of the distribution of sexes on the "remarriage market", rather than as an expression of any differential priorities or attitudes between sex groups.
(3) An interpretation of the observed patterns suggests the need for more attention to motivation in the study of remarriage behavior.
(4) The justification for doing tubal reanastomosis was remarriage 84%, and death of children 16%.
(5) Accurate information on remarriage status is important for fertility and mortality estimation methods that rely on marital duration.
(6) For middle-aged widowers, living in urbanized areas limits the prospects of remarriage.
(7) Implications for remarriage as a coping mechanism for widowhood and the relation of age to remarriage decisions are discussed.
(8) The increased incidence of divorce and remarriage within modern society has led to increased demand for reversal of previous sexual sterilization procedures.
(9) When they had been sterilised 78 (75-7%) patients were unhappily married and remarriage was the chief reason for the request for reversal.
(10) A comprehensive review of our knowledge on remarriage in old age is presented, based on demographic data and on empirical studies both from Germany and elsewhere.
(11) 91.2% requested sterilization reversal because they had lost at least 1 previous child, especially a son, and 8.77% because of remarriage.
(12) The main reason for the reversal request was remarriage (63.63%).
(13) Among middle-aged widows, blacks and those with dependent children in the home have lower rates of remarriage.
(14) Overall, age and time since widowhood have the strongest and most consistent effects on remarriage rates for different widowed groups.
(15) 12 of these women desired more children, 5 because of remarriage.
(16) The interval between loss of a partner and remarriage commonly stretches between 1.5 and 5.5 years.
(17) This note uses the direct report on remarriage in the 1910 census to evaluate the performance of the "own-child checks" that several researchers have used with the 1900 census to substitute for direct information on remarriage.
(18) Some articles that were not designed as studies of remarriage situations are included because their content is pertinent to our subject.
(19) Remarriage by divorced and widowed individuals of reproductive age is also common cross-culturally.
(20) Using data from the National Survey of Families and Households, this article illustrates the role of educational attainment in the remarriage patterns of black and white women.