Across
- 5. A purpose for family that offers physical protection, emotional support, and financial assistance.
- 8. A family composed of one or two parents and their children, also known as a conjugal family.
- 9. Cooperative groups that are family-like in structure whose members are not actually related. The group forms in order to help members sustain themselves by collaborating and sharing resources in low-income circumstances.
- 12. When married couples live with or near the wife's family (Greek, "place of the mother").
- 13. Marriage that unites a person with two or more spouses.
- 15. Marriage between people of different social categories.
- 16. A social bond based on common ancestry, marriage, or adoption.
- 17. Marriage that units two partners.
Down
- 1. Parents help children develop into well-integrated and contributing members of society through child-rearing.
- 2. A social institution found in all societies that unites people in cooperative groups to care for one another, including any children.
- 3. A culture's sexual norms to maintain kinship organization and property rights, to limit competition in families, and to help tie together the larger society.
- 4. When married couples live with or near the husband's family (Greek, "place of the father").
- 6. Marriage between people of the same social category.
- 7. When parents pass on their own social identity in terms of race, ethnicity, religion, and social class to their children at birth.
- 10. A family composed of parents and children as well as other kin; also known as a consanguine family.
- 11. Marriages that unites one woman and two or more men (Greek, "many men").
- 14. Marriage that unites one man and two or more women (Greek, "many women").
