| polygamy |
These are anthropological terms, not much used within the poly movement. They refer respectively to multiple marriages in general, marriages of multiple women to one man, and of multiple men to one woman. Polygyny has been much more common among world cultures than polyandry, and many non-anthropologists have used polygamy to refer mainly to polygyny, for example among the Mormons. These have mainly referred to marriages recognized by the culture in question. ...
Ãâó: www.openweave.org/NCPoly/PolyTerms.html
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| polygamous |
A species population containing plants that produce bisexual (perfect) and unisexual (imperfect) flowers on the same individual. Not to be confused with human polygamy, or having two or more wives or husbands at the same time. Note: Sometimes the unisexual flowers may contain the rudimentary parts of the opposite sex. [eg Toxicodendron diversilobum, better known as poison oak; also species in the Asteraceae with radiate and discoid heads. ]
Ãâó: waynesword.palomar.edu/termfl2.htm
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| polygamy |
Marriage of several, plural number of either husbands or wives. Polygamy is normatively approved in 77% of known societies.
Ãâó: www.faculty.fairfield.edu/faculty/hodgson/Courses/...
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| polygamy |
Marriage to more than one spouse at the same time. Men of the Muslim faith are legally allowed four wives at one time.
Ãâó: www.jeansasson.com/glossary_of_terms.htm
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