A person marrying a groom is a bride. In the case of a same-sex marriage (currently legal in 14 different countries) the person marrying a groom could be another groom.
Because he is not of noble birth, and has no traceable family roots.
The word 'just' used twice in a sentence: Twice I left him a message and twice he ignored me. The term 'just twice' used in a sentence: I've only been here just twice before.
Twice-baked potatoes The word 'biscuit' literally means baked twice.
Endogamy
No, the word "twice" is not a preposition. "Twice" is an adverb that indicates a frequency or occurrence of something happening two times.
The word for saying the same thing twice is "redundancy."
In the King James version the word - married - appears 30 times and the word - marriage - appears 19 times the word - marriages - appears 3 times the word - marrieth - appears 4 times the word - marry - appears 22 times the word - marrying - appears twice Note: In the use of English when the KJV translationw as made, 'marrieth' would have been the equivalent of "marries".
He wants to marry you because he is suffering from 'cogonitive disonance'. He is probabbly trying to justify his actions of cheating you by marrying you.
Twice Upon a Time
Once bitten, twice shy.
Whether you can marry your first cousin twice removed depends in part on the laws of the place where you propose to have the marriage performed. In most of the US, you can marry your first cousin, so marrying your first cousin twice removed would also be permitted.