Many children have grown up abusing their parents. Usually it is a learned trait that has been taught by one of the parents. If a husband abuses his wife verbally or physically then there is the chance that the child will grow up with these same traits. They may exhibit this on one of their parents or on their own wife or husband when they marry. If you are being physically abused then call your local Department of Social Services or 911. No one deserves to be abused verbally or phuysically. http://www.theresnoexcuse.com/front.html http://www.angelsthatcare.org/silent_abuse.html
Killing of one's husband: Mariticide or viricide Killing of one's wife: Uxoricide
No. Your husband's sister-in-law is either your sister or the wife of one of his siblings. If she is the wife of one of his siblings, she is not related to you.
Just as long as the wife doesn't drink one of her husband's spitters.
Your husband or wife, if you have one.
marriage
Wiband
I'm afraid not, because the wife will have the lingering notion and it will affect her ability to perform to her husband. Two scenario for this one is, if this couple stays together, the wife is the one that will experience the flashback of what her husband did. She will wonder how her husband made love to his affair partner. She will wonder how his affair partner satisfy her husband. This is one thing that most husband who had the affair never thought of, how it will affect and destroy his wife.
It is not legal in Massachusetts for a husband to lock his wife out of their home. One wonders where you got that idea.
One word is 'gwr' (man; husband) theother word is 'priod' (spouse, husband or wife)
echad (אחד)
Your spouse's sister is your sister-in-law and your spouse's brother is your brother-in-law. The English language has no term for a relationship between you and the wife of your brother-in-law or the husband of your sister-in-law. The best you can do in English is to use "my sister-in-law's husband" and similar phrases.