If the man refuses you offer but if not just let it go! Xxx
Well the person who asked then to come to dinner, Eg. The girfriends parents ask the boyfriends parents out for dinner they should pay unless they decide to spilt the cost.
It does not matter who pays for the wedding decorations now days. Back in the day it was the parents of the bride who paid for most of the stuff besides the rehearsal dinner that was paid by the grooms family.
The groom generally pays for the honeymoon.
I believe that the guy pays for the engagement dinner I know my ex in-laws paid for the rehersal dinner prior to the wedding My parents paid for the wedding meal and I paid for everything else
Traditionally, the groom's parents are responsible for accommodations for the groom's attendants and family. Other expenses they are responsible for include the marriage license fee, officiant's fee, rehearsal dinner, bachelor dinner, part of the flowers, the honeymoon, and the gifts from the groom to his attendants and the bride.
the bride and the grooms name
The diners.
It all depends on how set up the wedding and who agrees to pay for what. Traditionally, the groom's family pays for the rehearsal dinner for the members of the bridal party. They may sometimes pay for the tux's. Other than that the bride's parents pay for everything else. Some bridge and groom's pay for the wedding themselves and their parents don't pay anything.
Traditionally it is the Groom's family who will pay for the rehearsal dinner.
The Cosby Show - 1984 Elvin Pays for Dinner 6-13 was released on: USA: 4 January 1990
Usually the brides parents pay for the wedding. This has become controversial in today's times and not to mention a bit out-dated. Now couples usually pay for themselves, or the each set of parents help out equally
A wedding rehearsal dinner depends on the restaurant where everyone goes so the prices vary. It is generally the groom's father that pays for the rehearsal dinner and if the father can't afford the cost then a nice buffet or even a BBQ (depending on the time of year) at the groom's parents home would suffice.