nah! yer just shacking up
2006-06-30 02:03:56
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answer #1
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answered by RAllen1st 5
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Hell no! I am living with two women and sleeping with both! I can not be engaged to both. Or can I?
Just kidding. You have to discuss the engagement thing. On planning and one clueless about getting married would not be a good situation.
2006-06-30 09:03:19
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answer #2
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answered by dagoodest 2
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No. It means you live together. Your not engaged until you two make the promise to get married.
2006-06-30 09:01:31
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answer #3
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answered by Courtney 3
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No, moving in together is simply that.....moving in together. You'll now have a roomie.....even "talking about getting married" isn't necessarily getting engaged.....when u ask a woman to marry you and she says "yes"...that's getting engaged
2006-06-30 09:00:05
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answer #4
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answered by honey_bear_21_1999 4
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No. It's a test run. Sitting down and actually talking about getting married is getting engaged.
2006-06-30 09:00:05
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answer #5
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answered by Scarlett 1
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Nope, not even. It doesn't even mean "mutually exclusive realationship" unless those are the stated rules at the beginning. Generally you are safe in assuming that it means that your living expenses will be less. Any other assumptions are risky.
Communication is the key. There is an old saying about the word "assume"... When you assume, you make an *** out of u & me. (if you don't get it, look at the spelling of assume.)
2006-06-30 09:05:11
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answer #6
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answered by hipcat 2
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no, moving in together is just playing house, as judge judy would say. getting engaged involves a ring, a proposal, and crying and stuff.
2006-06-30 09:01:23
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answer #7
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answered by Bean 3
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Nope. I have friends that live together, & have 3 kids. But make sure you both "know" what it does mean to you, ie if the guy thinks its just to save rent & the girl thinks its on the route to marrriage then you've got trouble!
2006-06-30 09:01:46
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answer #8
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answered by cauliflower 3
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Good question...actually no. However in some states the longer you live together , you become " common law married". So it's good to know the laws and prepare yourself for some real "married" experiences.
2006-06-30 09:03:59
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answer #9
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answered by twostories 4
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nope, not necessarily. People move in for many reason, the majority of the times is to save some money by having some else life with you.
2006-06-30 09:01:59
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answer #10
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answered by SuzzyLou 2
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No,not always.
Maybe your other half juss needs a place to stay for a bit.
Let them move in & give it some time.
Let it grow,then you decide what "moving in together" RILLY means.
2006-06-30 09:01:33
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answer #11
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answered by inurface012391 2
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