marital
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++mar·i·tal /ˈmærətl/ ●○○ adjective [only before noun] SSFMARRYrelating to marriage 婚姻的 marital problems 婚姻问题 the increase in marital breakdown 婚姻破裂的增多marital bliss (=the state of being very happily married – used humorously) 婚姻美满〔幽默用法〕
Examples from the Corpus
marital• For an immigrant boy this marital alliance was no mean achievement.• It wasn't what you would call marital bliss, but it was a good, solid marriage.• Some married couples seem to endure, maybe even enjoy, marital brawls.• And our soulless moments of marital disconnection have robbed her of the outright gaiety that once counterpointed these darker spells.• The police have the power to stop people holding their marital disputes in public.• The stress of the job causes marital problems for many police officers.• These can be forms of avoidance that make it impossible for the couple to look at their marital problems.• As children leave home marital satisfaction tends to pick up again.• This was not a marital settlement agreement...• True, unemployment has reached a record one-in-ten high, marital splits are up to one-in-three and the pound has been devalued.• Age, sex and marital status all affect earnings and income.• Many wives do not report acts of marital violence to the police.marital bliss• I am not suggesting that shared parenting ensures marital bliss.• Tensions soon simmered beneath the impression of domestic harmony and marital bliss.• Certainly they now boasted insistently of the marital bliss of their daughter and the solid Civil Service progress of their son.Origin marital (1400-1500) Latin maritalis, from maritus “husband”mar·i·tal adjectiveChineseSyllable
marriage Corpus to relating
marital
mar‧i‧tal /ˈmærətl, ˈmærɪtl/
adjective [only before noun]
marital problems
the increase in marital breakdown
marital bliss (=the state of being very happily married – used humorously)
mar‧i‧tal /ˈmærətl, ˈmærɪtl/
adjective [only before noun] Date: 1400-1500
Language: Latin
Origin: maritalis, from maritus 'husband'
relating to marriage:Language: Latin
Origin: maritalis, from maritus 'husband'
marital bliss (=the state of being very happily married – used humorously)