|  | NUPTA | A bride or wife: sponsa, coniunx, fortasse etiam nympha | 
|  | TRUDO | I push or shove forward: pello, fortasse etiam adigo | 
|  | NEWLYWED | Like blushing bride ... or wife in northern cathedral before midweek (5-3) | 
|  | VEIL | Old word for a covering or curtain; the headdress of a nun or a bride; or, anything that conceals, disguises or obscures, such as a facade, mask, pretence or a shroud of mist (4) | 
|  | SPONSA | Nova nupta; a bride, or at least a betrothed | 
|  | BRIDAL | Of a bride or a wedding (6) | 
|  | AISLE | Pathway for a bride or a grocery cart | 
|  | IDO | Words said by a bride or groom: 2 wds. | 
|  | NYMPHA | A bride or young woman | 
|  | DEBONAIR | What's silly on a bride -or sophisticated (8) | 
|  | INLAW | Something a bride or groom might acquire | 
|  | PAGE | Young boy attending a bride or knight, eg (4) | 
|  | SHOWER | Party for a bride or baby (6) | 
|  | LAVINIA | Aeneas' second wife: altera Aeneae coniunx | 
|  | ECHO | Nympha resonabilis quae Narcissum vidit et incaluit (Ovid Met. 3) | 
|  | EGERIA | Nympha sapiens, uxor et doctrix regis Numae | 
|  | URSA | Nympha Callisto ____ facta est, tum constellatio | 
|  | ORPHEUS | Cantor, filius Calliopes et Eurydices coniunx | 
|  | MARITUS | The other half, 'im indoors: coniunx, vir | 
|  | NURUS | Daughter-in-law: ut coniunx tua tuae matri |