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13 Sentences With "lived together as man and wife"

How to use lived together as man and wife in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lived together as man and wife" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lived together as man and wife". Mastering all the usages of "lived together as man and wife" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In fact Weatherly and his wife Minnie never divorced: Maude Francfort used the name Weatherly while they lived together as man and wife in Bath. Minnie lived on in seclusion in Portishead, financially supported by her husband until her death in 1920.
In 1543, Bess married 13-year-old Robert Barley (or Barlow), heir to a neighbouring estate. The exact date of her marriage to Robert is unknown. It is thought that the marriage took place late May 1543, shortly before the death of Robert's father on 28 May. There is no evidence that they lived together as man and wife.
These difficulties essentially ended white fathers in the South freeing their slave children and concubines. But the Healy couple lived together as man and wife from 1829 until their deaths a few months apart in 1850, and had intended to move to the North with their youngest children. During that time they had ten children, nine of whom survived to adulthood.
Lonardo's common-law wife was Concetta Paragone. She was born in Licata about 1888. Sources differ as to how they became a couple. Some sources say Concetta accompanied Joseph to the United States in 1901. Concetta herself later claimed that she and Lonardo had lived together as man and wife since 1902 (although they never had a civil or religious ceremony).
If the pair had been domiciled in Scotland, the fact that Strathmore and Millner had lived together as man and wife would have been sufficient to establish a marriage. Hare claims that young John Bowes was enrolled at Eton as Lord Glamis. he did not inherit the Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne title. All sources describe Bowes as the fully and openly acknowledged son of the 10th Earl.
The Macleod and MacDonald Clans had been long at feud. Rory Mòr MacLeod (Ruaraidh MacLeòid) attempted to make peace, offering the hand of his sister, Margaret Macleod, in marriage to Donald Gorm Mòr MacDonald (Dòmhnall Gorm Mòr MacDhòmhnall). The marriage itself was subject to a contract called a handfast. In a handfast arrangement, a man and woman lived together as man and wife for up to a year and a day.
The next heir to the Dunboyne barony after Edmond was his uncle, the 2nd Baron's younger son Pierce (whose grandson, also named Pierce, was later to inherit the title as the 5th Baron). In 1618 Pierce petitioned the Crown to declare his nephew illegitimate, on the grounds that while his parents had lived together as man and wife, his father was at all material times married to Eleanor, a daughter of Theobald Butler, 1st Baron Cahir.Lodge, John and Archdall, Mervyn The Peerage of Ireland, Dublin James Moore, 1789, Vol. 6, pp. 226-227.
Henry Flood (1732 – 2 December 1791), Irish statesman, son of Warden Flood, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland, was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and afterwards at Christ Church, Oxford, where he became proficient in the classics. He was a leading Irish politician, and a friend of Henry Grattan, the leader of the Irish Patriot Party. His father was of good birth and fortune, but Henry suffered the stigma of being generally believed to be illegitimate. There is some confusion about the details but it seems that while his father and his mother Isabella Whiteside lived together as man and wife they were not legally married.
According to one source, during her time in Moscow Elli Schmidt began to live with the comrade generally identified by his party pseudonym as Anton Ackermann, a leading member of the team that would embark on a carefully choreographed nation building programme under the leadership of Walter Ulbricht in the Soviet occupation zone after April 1945. Elsewhere it is stated that the two of them were married back in 1935 when they met as a result of their work in the Comecon. In any event, the two of them lived together as man and wife till 1949, by which time it appears they had at some point formally married. The marriage produced two children, born approximately in 1941 and 1948 respectively.
9 Davenport had refused to become the Earl's mistress, and it was her belief that the two had legally married, a claim later refuted by de Vere in a court case of 1686. Davenport claimed that she had married de Vere some time in 1662 or 1663 (by which time he was a widower) in the dining room of Elizabeth Farlow, who had a chandler's shop in London in a ceremony performed by a man 'in a Minister's Habit',London, Metropolitan Archive, DL/C/241, fol. 435v who was probably de Vere's groom or one of his trumpeters in disguise. Whatever the truth of the matter, from that time onwards the Earl and Davenport lived together as man and wife in Drury Lane until the couple moved to Covent Garden when she fell pregnant.
She alleged that in October 1930, while Brownlee was driving her home after one such visit, the premier took her hand and asked her what she knew "about life". On her response that she knew probably as much as any girl of eighteen, he invited her out the next evening for what she presumed would be some advice. Instead, he drove her west of town on Highway 16 and parked on a side road before asking her to have sex with him. He said that he had been madly in love with her from the start, that he was lonely, that he and his wife had not lived together as man and wife in a long time, that his wife (an invalid) would be endangered by a pregnancy, and that he could not be premier any longer unless MacMillan agreed to have sex with him.
Born June Howard- Tripp in Blackpool, she worked mainly on stage (in revue). She made a handful of films, mostly in the silent era. Her most notable screen role was in the silent Alfred Hitchcock thriller The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927) opposite Ivor Novello. In March 1929, June Tripp married John Alan Burns, 4th Baron Inverclyde and went to live at Castle Wemyss. She appears as 'Topsy' in Inverclyde's account of his travels in his steam yacht Beryl around the Mediterranean in the summer of 1929. However by September 1930 Tripp was in Hollywood having taken up what would prove to be longterm American residency. In November 1930 Tripp suing for annulment of her marriage, alleging she and Inverclyde had "never lived together as man and wife". Tripp ultimately received a divorce in Reno in August 1931 (but was still considered married in her native land until Inverclyde was granted a divorce in December 1933).
Mr. Williams was given a decree of divorce on August 26, 1940 by the state of Nevada on the grounds of extreme cruelty, the court finding that 'the plaintiff has been and now is a bona fide and continuous resident of the County of Clark, State of Nevada, and had been such resident for more than six weeks immediately preceding the commencement of this action in the manner prescribed by law'. It was not until October 4, 1940 that Ms. Hendrix was declared divorced on the grounds of willful neglect and extreme cruelty and made the same finding as to this petitioner's bona fide residence in Nevada as it made in the case of Williams. On that same day, October 4, 1940, Mr. Williams and Ms. Hendrix were married in Las Vegas, Nevada. Soon after their marriage they returned to North Carolina where they lived together as man and wife until a lawsuit was filed against them.

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