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Affinity&_160;· Attachment&_160;· Bonding
Boyfriend&_160;· Casual&_160;· Cohabitation
Compersion&_160;· Concubinage
Consort&_160;· Courtesan&_160;· Courtship
Divorce&_160;· Domestic partnership
Dower&_160;/ Dowry&_160;/ Bride price
Family&_160;· Friendship&_160;· Girlfriend
Husband&_160;· Infatuation&_160;· Intimacy
Jealousy&_160;· Limerence&_160;· Love
Kinship&_160;· Marriage&_160;· Monogamy
Psychology of monogamy
Non-monogamy
Passion&_160;· Pederasty
Platonic love&_160;· Polyamory
Polyfidelity&_160;· Polygamy
Relationship abuse
Relationship breakup&_160;· Romance
Romantic friendship&_160;· Separation
Sexuality&_160;· Same-sex relationship
Significant other&_160;· Soulmate
Teen dating violence&_160;· Wedding
Widowhood&_160;· Wife The term polygamy (a Greek word meaning "the practice of multiple marriage") is used in related ways in social anthropology, sociobiology, and sociology. Polygamy can be defined as any "form of marriage in which a person [has] more than one spouse."[1] In social anthropology, polygamy is the practice of marriage to more than one spouse simultaneously. Historically, polygamy has been practiced as polygyny (one man having more than one wife), or as polyandry (one woman having more than one husband), or, less commonly as group marriage (husbands having many wives and those wives having many husbands). (See "Forms of Polygamy" below.) In contrast, monogamy is the practice of each person having only one spouse. Like monogamy, the term is often used in a de facto sense, applying regardless of whether the relationships are recognized by the state (see marriage for a discussion on the extent to which states can and do recognize potentially and actually polygamous forms as valid). In sociobiology, polygamy is used in a broad sense to mean any form of multiple mating. In a narrower sense, used by zoologists, polygamy includes a pair bond, perhaps temporary.
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