gamo-, gam-, -gamy, -gamous +
(Greek: marriage, union; wedding; pertaining to sexual union)
bigamist
1. A person who commits bigamy or someone who is married illegally to two people simultaneously.
2. Said to be someone who demonstrates that "two rites make a wrong" and an action by someone who is participating in "double jeopardy".
bigamous
Involved in or constituting an illegal marriage made when an existing marriage is still valid.
bigamy
1. Marriage with a second wife or husband during the lifetime of the first; the crime of having two wives or husbands at the same time.
2. The crime of marrying someone while being legally married to someone else.
3. In law, the criminal offense of willfully and knowingly contracting a second marriage (or going through the form of a second marriage) while the first marriage, to the knowledge of the offender, is still subsisting and undissolved. The state of a man who has two wives, or of a woman who has two husbands, living at the same time.
4. Bigamus seu trigamus, etc., est qui diversis temporibus et successive duas seu tres uxores habuit (A bigamus or trigamus, etc., is one who at different times and successively has married two or three wives).
cenogamy
1. A community of wives or husbands.
2. The doctrine that every man is married to every woman in a certain community.
cleistogamy, cleistogamic, cleistogamous
Applied to certain small inconspicuous permanently closed flowers, adapted for self-fertilization, occurring in various plants (e.g. Oxalis Acetosella, different species of Viola, etc.) on the same individuals as the normal larger brightly-colored flowers, which in such cases are either cross-fertilized or barren.
cryptogamia, cryptogamy
A large division of the vegetable kingdom, being the last class in the Linnean Sexual system, and comprising those plants that have no stamens or pistils, and therefore no proper flowers; including ferns, mosses, algae, lichens, liverworts, horsetails, club mosses, and fungi.
deuterogamy
1. Marriage a second time; marriage after the death of a first husband or wife; as distinguished from bigamy.
2. In botany, the condition in which fertilization by the fusion of gametes is replaced by other processes, as in some fungi, the higher algae, and flowering plants.
dichogamy, dichogamous
The condition in which the stamens and pistils (or analogous organs) of a hermaphrodite plant mature at different times.
digamist
One who marries a second time; especially, after the death of the first spouse.
digamy, digamous
A second marriage; re-marriage after the death or divorce of the first spouse.
dysonogamia
Marriage between persons of markedly different ages.
endogamy, endogamous, endogamic
1. The custom of marrying only within the limits of a clan or a tribe.
2. Reproduction by conjugation between sister cells, the descendants of one original cell.
epigamic, epigamous
1. Relating to the mating of animals and the characteristics of color, etc., that serve to attract the opposite sex during courtship.
2. A reference to traits or behaviors which attract a mate.
Examples of epigamous traits include such physical features as bright feathers in birds or big antlers. With humans, it might be a fancy sports car, a luxury car, or certain bodily attractions and personality.
exogamy, exogamous, exogamic
1. The custom by which a man is bound to take a wife outside his own clan or group.
2. Sexual reproduction by means of conjugation of two gametes of different ancestry, as in certain protozoan species.
gamic
Having a sexual character; sexual.