If they want to.
People who got married have rings , rings can stand for their marriage and they can show others that they have their lover and they have their own marriage .
Dont get married!
Yes of course they wear their rings in public! That is the point of wearing it, to let others know YOU ARE MARRIED.
They wear wedding rings. Orthodox Jewish women also cover their hair in public once they're married.
Well people tend to buy rings and hold a ceremony in a space and that's how they get married on the game.
people exchange rings as a symbolof their love, you might think why not a necklace or bracelet, but the answer to that is, they are easier to break, and once tey have broken, so is your love.
When two people are in love and do not have very much money it is love that counts and not how expensive the weddingrings are. There are some beautiful costume jewelry rings that the bride and groom could wear when they get married and later, (often couples do this) when they have accumulated enough money they can have their wedding and either use the rings they have or, they may decide to get more expensive rings. It's the memories behind the rings that count and not how expensive they are.
You can't, Simple as. People say they get married, but it's something between users... they just go to someones house or to a church and trade rings.
No. They were "engaged" with promise rings, but they did not get married.
Couples exchange vows when they get married. They may also exchange wedding rings.
None. Rings are a custom, not a legal requirement.
Engagement rings and promise rings are both 20th century inventions, and have no traditional etiquette. You can wear them wherever you want, whether you are gay or straight.In the United States and Canada, married people (gay or straight) generally wear their wedding rings on the left hand. In some other countries, people wear the wedding ring on the right hand. There is a myth that all Gay people wear wedding rings on a different hand than straight people to indicate they are gay, but this is untrue.