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Page "Culture of Samoa" ¶ 23
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At and weddings
* At some weddings the couple may declare that each is sanctified to the other, and / or repeat other vows, and exchange rings.
At traditional Chinese weddings, the Tea Ceremony is the equivalent of an exchange of vows at a Western wedding ceremony.
At weddings, the amount offered is usually intended to cover the cost of the attendees as well as signify goodwill to the newlyweds.
At Whitsun, on 21 May and the next days, three weddings were celebrated at Durham Place, the Duke of Northumberland's town mansion.
At Mrs. Crane's death in 1949, the entire property was bequeathed to The Trustees of Reservations, which uses it as a venue for concerts and weddings.
At Japanese weddings, brides will often wear three or more dresses throughout the ceremony and subsequent celebrations with a traditional kimono, white and colour dress combination being popular.
At one time it was used for weddings and funerals of the home's residents.
At Japanese weddings, it is customary for friends and relatives to offer " banzai " toasts to the bride and groom, wishing them long life.
At weddings, people would receive a string of the tali ( wedding lock ) prepared by her, threaded with a few beads from her own necklace.
At the center of the park is a large Pavilion, used frequently for dances, parties, and weddings.
At the time, weddings were largely a matter of civic registration rather than religious ceremony, but one of the first acts of their shared life was a short pilgrimage from Ōtsu to the remains of the Buddhist temple complex on Mount Hiei ( Which, coincidentally, would later become the Kyoto headquarters of Kenshin's future nemesis Shishio Makoto ).
At weddings, " golden " chicken soup was often served.
At weddings in many Western countries, this piece is commonly used as a recessional, though frequently stripped of its episodes in this context.
At Jewish weddings, the entrance of the Groom is accompanied by a tune called baruch haba.
At traditional Scottish weddings there is often a dance, after the ceremony, called a ceilidh.
At social or festive occasions, e. g. races and weddings, a contrasting waistcoat is worn, usually dove grey or sometimes buff, although there has been a tendency towards ' fancy ' waistcoats of multicoloured and embridered materials.
At this time it was decided that operations would be expanded to include weddings and receptions in the castle courtyard in an effort to better utilize the facility, better serve the needs of the public, and to raise additional funds to further the charitable programs of the Sisters of Mercy.
# REDIRECT Party favor # At weddings
At weddings he was acclaimed for the warm welcoming of the bride and groom with his number Maa Destmal Aawordaim ( ما دستمال آورديم ) ( Gohar Album ) which roughly translates as “ we ‘ ve brought our brother ’ s bride .” This album established Nasrat as a respected singer and also garnered him praise of critics.
At one of his later weddings, the officiating mayor of Neuilly said: " Ah, good day, Monsieur Barclay, what a pleasure to see you yet again.
At weddings, the singer begins with a mawwal.
At weddings, the dance is sometimes performed by a professional troupe dressed in costume.

At and chiefly
At the moment of his election, chiefly through the influence of Cardinal Borghese, at his advanced age ( he was 67 ) and with his weak state of health he saw at once that he would need an energetic man, in whom he could place implicit confidence, to assist him in the government of the Church.
At the time, Kierkegaard's philosophy exerted a strong influence, chiefly through its claim to pose an alternative to Idealism and Hegel's philosophy of history.
At Maotize coal was mined ; the industry was chiefly financed by Belgian capital.
At Maotize coal was mined ; the industry was chiefly financed by Belgian capital.
At 18 years of age he went to Balliol College, Oxford, where, chiefly through the influence of the earl of Mar, he was nominated ( 1711 ) one of Bishop Warner's exhibitioners ( or Snell exhibitioner ) at Balliol.
At the time of European encounter, the area was inhabited chiefly by the historic Iroquoian-speaking Mohawk of the Iroquois Confederacy to the west of Lake Champlain, with Algonquian-speaking Mahican to the south.
At Frederick's death, the kingdom was to revert to the Angevins ( this clause was inserted chiefly to allow Charles to save face ) and Frederick's children would receive compensation elsewhere.
At first he was chiefly employed as a singer, but his skills as an actor and reciter of comic monologues were soon recognised.
At that time the trade was chiefly carried on from Liverpool and by the end of the 18th century more than half the trade was British.
At a national level, the work of the Church of Scotland is chiefly carried out by " Councils ", each supported by full-time staff mostly based at the Church of Scotland Offices in Edinburgh.
At the Council of Florence ( 1431 – 1445 ), these controversies about Western theological elaborations and usages were identified as, chiefly, the insertion of " Filioque " in the Nicene Creed, the use of unleavened bread for the Eucharist, Purgatory, and the authority of the Pope.
At the Tudor House Hotel in the High Street however, although it is indeed chiefly a Tudor building, the frontage comprises artificial half-timbering attached to a brick-built facade.
At MacDill, Eighth Air Force headquarters were manned chiefly by personnel from the 58th Bombardment Wing, Very Heavy, stationed at Fort Worth AAF, Texas.
At that time the Brethren of the Free Spirit were causing controversy in the Netherlands and one of them, a woman named Heilwige Bloemardinne, was particularly active in Brussels, propagating her beliefs chiefly by means of popular pamphlets.
At the same time conspiracy theories were concocted combining Germanophobia with antisemitism, concerning the supposed foreign control of Britain, some of which blamed Britain's entry in to the Boer War on international financiers " chiefly German in origin and Jewish in race ".
At the time, there was a great deal of interest in leveraging the stability, low cost and computational / rendering power of the new generation of game consoles, chiefly Sony ’ s PlayStation 2 and Microsoft ’ s Xbox, for training applications.
At this period the order was introduced into England and America chiefly through the efforts of Fathers Bosio and Morini.
At the end of the war and coming into the 1920s the Shuttle which was still chiefly run by Edward Parry and William Wimbury, but Wimbury became ill and died in 1920.
At regular intervals, currently every four years, IPCA-Europe organizes a pan-European conference chiefly aimed at active prison chaplains.
And also fruit, as Water-melons, Melons, Gourds, Citruls, Melongena, Sesamum ( by the natives called samsaim, the seeds whereof are very much used to strew upon their bread ) and many more ; but chiefly the Colocasia, which is very common there, and are sold all the year long .... At Tripoli they have no want of water, for several rivers flow down from the mountains, and run partly through the town, and partly through the gardens, so that they want no water neither in the gardens nor in their houses.
At first a musician, chiefly a soloist on the lute, he was in great request among the Venetian nobility.
At this period the district south of the River Avon and the River Nadder was occupied by dense woodland, the relics of which survive in Cranborne Chase, and the first wave of West Saxon colonization was chiefly confined to the valleys of the River Avon and the River Wylye, the little township of Wilton which arose in the latter giving the name of Wilsaetan to the new settlers.
At the time of Small Gods ( a hundred years previous to the time explored by other Discworld novels according to Thief of Time ), the Cenobiarch was a very old man, and the country was actually ruled by his advisors, chiefly Vorbis.
At the age of eighteen, he entered the service of the Eastern department of the ministry of foreign affairs, and spent more than twenty years in subordinate posts, chiefly in south-eastern Europe, until he was promoted in 1863 to the post of minister plenipotentiary in Persia.

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