Why not!
The mother of the bride will be the groom's Mother-in-Law or Future Mother-In-Law if the wedding has not occurred yet.
the bride and the groom is first, then the bride and her father, and then the groom and his mother. After that the bride dance with her new dad and groom dance with his new mom.
Yes, she should.
Hopefully cash to pay for the wedding
no not exactly but she can go against it at the wedding
At a wedding reception, songs traditionally go in a specific order. They are first dance for bride and groom then mother and groom or father and bride.
Yes. If the groom is very religious, he might wear a suit jacket of extended length.
In Venezuela, the only attendants during the wedding ceremony are the bride and groom's parents. The mother of the bride can walk down the aisle herself or with the mother of the groom.
It is not written in stone that a mother has to give her daughter a personal gift, but some mothers may have a lovely piece of jewelry that they have had or the piece was given to the mother by her mother and she may want to pass it onto her daughter. The mother and father of bride do give a wedding gift either the day of the wedding at home or, leave the wedding gift at the reception.
A groom on a Jewish wedding day wears what you wear in a English wedding
The groom should buy the engagement and wedding ring for his bride to be and the bride to be should buy the groom's wedding band.
* Unless the bride so chooses to do so then no, the groom's mother does not get a gift. Both mothers should have corsages at the wedding.