Remember that apostrophes are used to make a word possessive, not a plural.
"Mother's" would mean "belonging to Mother".
The husband is the groom. He is the bride's mate. The wife is the bride. She is the husband's mate.
Bride is a noun.
Usually:a) To mark possession: e.g. the man's book, the bride's dress, the car's engine; the players' changing-room. Note the relative position of the apostrophe on the plural: one man, bride or car but many players.b) In certain abbreviations: it's (= it is), that's (=that is), and so on. NB the difference between its and it's. "Its" is the possessive for "it", as this rather contrived example shows: "The car's engine failed. It's a write-off because itsblock has cracked."
A compound noun form of the noun 'bride' is bridegroom.
The maid of honor is the opposite of best man in a wedding.
No. "Mother's" means "belonging to the mother." You are talking about a simple plural. No apostrophe for plurals. Say: Presentation of roses to the mothers of the bride and groom
No. In this case, the word "mothers" is only plural. The construction "mothers of the bride and groom" takes away the need for a possessive "s" and apostrophe.
If you're saying it as a plural, no, but if you were to say it belongs to them, i.e...that is the bride's flowers.. etc, then yes.More information:Where, or whether, you put an apostrophe in the word 'brides' depends on the context.If you're speaking of one bride, in the possessive sense, the apostrophe goes at the end of the word 'bride': The bride's gown was beautifully made.If you're speaking of more than one bride, in the possessive sense, the apostrophe goes at the end of the word 'brides': The brides' gowns were beautifully made.If you're speaking of more than one bride, in the plural sense, there's no apostrophe: The brides looked beautiful at their rehearsals.
a
Black.
It is in poor taste to have a bridal shower at the home of the bride's mother. The bride's aunts or friends host showers.
It depends on the specific type of wedding. If the mothers are young, they shouldn't make themselves look "old."
Blaze Orange?
Sometimes, but they usually wear dressy dresses.
Go to www.bbc/don't tell the bride and then get the details from there.
At Orthodox Jewish weddings, the groom is escorted by both fathers and the bride is escorted by both mothers. At modern Jewish weddings, the bride and groom are escorted by their parents.
Unless the mother and daughter are estranged then yes, the mother of the bride goes to the wedding. Mothers and fathers generally want to see their daughter married.