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In general, on the right-hand side of the bride.
the word is "Proxy"
* The Bride and Groom sit in the middle of the head table and the bride is on the Groom's right; then her Maid (or Matron) of Honor; then the Bridesmaids. To the left of the Groom is his Best Man and the Ushers.
The groom stands to the right sideways to watch his bride come down the aisle and his Best Man stands beside him.
they stand on the side of their family and where the guests are seated
When introducing the bride and groom for their first dance say 'Ladies and Gentlemen, please stand and applaud for the first dance of Mr. & Mrs. John Doe.
* No, the mother of the bride and the parents of the groom sit in the front pews closest to the bride and groom as the father of the bride will walk down the aisle with his daughter, side down with his wife, then will stand to give his daughter's hand in marriage and sit back down again. The groom and his best man are already standing at the right of the altar.
At a Jewish wedding the groom stands next to the bride, on her left; both of them facing Jerusalem.
it's a wedding ceremony. The chuppah itself is what the bride and groom stand under, but most people call the ceremony itself a chuppah
I believe that they would walk out as they were standing at the alter. The groom on the right (also where his family sits) an the bride on the left (also where her family sits). This is coming from the view at the door as you look at the alter.
It is becoming more and more common that the bride and groom welcome the guests to the wedding reception and then they are announced into the reception hall. Usually it is the parents of the bride, or the parents of the bride and groom.
The Rabbi reads the Ketubah (wedding vows) as the bride and groom stand under the wedding canopy (Chuppah) in the presence of the guests. Then he says seven blessings over a cup of wine, and the groom places a ring on the bride's finger and ceremoniously declares that he is betrothing her.