Here you can find traditional and non-traditional wedding vows. Read and learn how correct write them. And get to know some interesting wedding vows traditions in different countries.
Wedding Vows
Wedding Vows
If you're a soft-hearted person and you want some non-traditional vows with soft words which express your felling you should to choose romantic wedding vows.

(Name), from the moment I first saw you, I knew you were the one with whom I wanted to share my life. Together we will create a home, becoming a part of one another. Your beauty, heart, and mind inspire me to be the best person I can be. I promise to love you for eternity, respecting you, honoring you, being faithful to you, and sharing my life with you. I want you to be, and to grow old by your side as your love and best traditional_vowsfriend. This is my solemn vow.

To add some entertainment to your ceremony and celebrate your unique relationship, you may want to choose funny wedding vows. All what you need it’s just try adding an extra promise or two that's unique to your relationship.

"I promise to make your favorite fruit smoothies on Sundays."

As Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston promised each other, "I vow to split the difference on the thermostat."

It does not matter which the types of vows your choose, the most important thing it is your feeling.

In different countries are different traditions about wedding vows. In Japan for example, during the bride and the groom exchange their wedding vows, all guests and relatives face each other. In many branches of the Russian Orthodox Church the couple's vows take the form of silent prayer, in which they promise to be faithful and loving. In Pakistan the vows aren't exchanged until the third day of merriment. In a traditional Orthodox Jewish wedding the bride does not recite the vows. That task is left to the groom, who typically says (in Hebrew), "Behold, you are consecrated to me with this ring according to the laws of Moses and Israel."



<< Wedding Vows