<Ul> <Li> </Li> <Li> </Li> <Li> </Li> </Ul> <P> Bride price, best called bridewealth, also known as bride token, is money, property, or other form of wealth paid by a groom or his family to the parents of the woman he has just married or is just about to marry . Bride price can be compared to dowry, which is paid to the groom, or used by the bride to help establish the new household and dower, which is property settled on the bride herself by the groom at the time of marriage . Some cultures may practice both dowry and bride price simultaneously . Many cultures practiced bride pricing prior to existing records . </P> <P> The tradition of giving bride price is practiced in many Asian countries, the Middle East, parts of Africa and in some Pacific Island societies, notably those in Melanesia . The amount changing hands may range from a token to continue the traditional ritual, to many thousands of US dollars in some marriages in Thailand, and as much as a $100,000 in exceptionally large bride prices in parts of Papua New Guinea where bride price is customary . </P> <P> Bridewealth is commonly paid in a currency that is not generally used for other types of exchange . According to French anthropologist Philippe Rospabé, its payment does therefore not entail the purchase of a woman, as was thought in the early twentieth century . Instead, it is a purely symbolic gesture acknowledging (but never paying off) the husband's permanent debt to the wife's parents . </P>

Connect the concept of the bride price to a tradition we still follow in the united states