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Liton Das Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Marry off

I just need enough money to marry my sister off to a decent man, who is worthy enough to have her and has all the potential to keep her happy.


I know marry off means I want to get rid of her but could you help me with the similar phrasal verbs or how could I say this to someone Keeping the meaning same. (For educational purpose only)


I do my duty and then give a hand to my sister helping with household chores.

Is this sentence grammatically correct.

  

Top answer

I do my own chores and then give a hand to my sister, helping her with her chores. Liton Das I know marry off means I want to get rid of her There are no other phrasal verbs with the same meaning. An "arranged marriage" is common in some cultures, where two families decide that their children will marry each other.

  • I do my own chores and then give a hand to my sister, helping her with her chores.
  • Liton Das I know marry off means I want to get rid of her There are no other phrasal verbs with the same meaning.
  • An "arranged marriage" is common in some cultures, where two families decide that their children will marry each other.
  • There is sometimes an intermediary, a matchmaker or marriage broker.
  • The families match their children based on the social status, and temperament and age of the children.
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1 Answers
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I do my own chores and then give a hand to my sister, helping her with her chores.

Liton DasI know marry off means I want to get rid of her

There are no other phrasal verbs with the same meaning.

An "arranged marriage" is common in some cultures, where two families decide that their children will marry each other. There is sometimes an intermedi

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