Traditionally, Bride Elect is used to denote property. The man has chosen to own this woman.
The term "bride elect" does not require a hyphen. It is used to describe a woman who has been chosen to be a bride but has not yet married. However, if used as a compound adjective before a noun, you might see it hyphenated as "bride-elect."
The bride is the girl. The bridegroom is the guy.
what does elect mean
Many commentators think the "elect lady" and her "children" are a sort of code name for the church, which is the Bride of Christ. Other commentators think John was literally writing to a Christian lady and her family.
Bride
the people
a groom
Deflowering the bride is an old term when the bride and groom are married; spend their wedding night together and she loses her virginity.
A bride is a woman who is about to be married or who has recently been married. She is the central figure at a wedding ceremony.
Campains are made to elect anybody.
The Bride. The bridegroom is the male, and the bride is the female.
Bride? I'm not sure what you mean, but a bride and groom get married to become husband and wife :)