When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Adultery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adultery

    This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 22 January 2025. Type of extramarital sex This article is about the act of adultery or extramarital sex. For other uses, see Adultery (disambiguation). For a broad overview, see Religion and sexuality. Illustration depicting an adulterous wife, circa 1800 Sex and the law Social issues Consent ...

  3. Adultery in English law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adultery_in_English_law

    The Act also altered the handling of adultery in English law: it abolished the crime of criminal conversation, but maintained the principle that 'since a wife's adultery caused injury to the husband, it entitled him to claim compensation from the adulterer', implying that the wife was the property of the husband – not least because wives ...

  4. Adultery laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adultery_laws

    Adultery laws are the laws in various countries that deal with extramarital sex.Historically, many cultures considered adultery a very serious crime, some subject to severe punishment, especially in the case of extramarital sex involving a married woman and a man other than her husband, with penalties including capital punishment, mutilation, or torture. [1]

  5. Infidelity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infidelity

    Infidelity (synonyms include non-consensual non-monogamy, cheating, straying, adultery, being unfaithful, two-timing, or having an affair) is a violation of a couple's emotional or sexual exclusivity that commonly results in feelings of anger, sexual jealousy, and rivalry.

  6. Extramarital sex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extramarital_sex

    Accordingly, a Catholic wedding strictly teaches that a husband and wife publicly promise fidelity to each other until death, which is the sole reason for the dissolution of a Sacramental Marriage. Consequentially, both Adultery and Divorce contradicts this nuptial promise by breach made to the covenant of Holy Mother Church.

  7. After 117 years, adultery on the brink of becoming legal in ...

    www.aol.com/news/117-years-adultery-brink...

    Adultery, a misdemeanor in New York since 1907, is defined in state code as when a person “engages in sexual intercourse with another person at a time when he has a living spouse, or the other ...

  8. Affair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affair

    Individuals having affairs with married men or women can be prosecuted for adultery in some jurisdictions and can be sued by the jilted spouses in others, or named as 'co-respondents' in divorce proceedings. As of 2009, eight U.S. states permitted such alienation of affections lawsuits. [5]

  9. Thou shalt not commit adultery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thou_shalt_not_commit_adultery

    While cases of adultery could thus be difficult to prove, divorce laws added over the years enabled a husband to divorce his wife on circumstantial evidence of adultery, without witnesses or additional evidence. [7] Before the destruction of the Second Temple, the Jewish courts relinquished their right to inflict capital punishment.