Yes definetly as customs and rituals are same only they have to overcome language barriers.It is also not a problem since Telugu and kannada texts are same and words are also 65% same.
Yes, because the room belongs to the bride, so it is the Bride's Room.
vadhUH [वधूः] = bride
Bride is a noun and so doesn't have any tenses.
The word "bride" has one syllable.
The word for "bride" in Tamil is "மணமகள்" (pronounced as "Manamagal").
The opposite gender of bride is bridegroom, or groom.
Yes, I do not know jenniwar?,but Devanga and Lingayat communities are together in many ways since many centuries.In fact both are ardent saivaites and some elders say that few groups of devangas only due to differences in stone worship of lord shiva formed Lingayat sect. Later part of time Devangas of Karnataka infact put up a petition in Madras Presidency under british rule stating that ''Lingayat is a way of worship not a caste of origin"
The Bride. The bridegroom is the male, and the bride is the female.
The bride is the girl. The bridegroom is the guy.
Bride
Bride
Bride
Bridegroom
A friend of the bridegroom who went with him in his chariot to fetch home the bride., The bridesmaid who conducted the bride to the bridegroom., An ally; a supporter or abettor.
Groom or Bridegroom
It is the groom, or bridegroom.
A compound noun form of the noun 'bride' is bridegroom.