Yes they do mean the same thing.
The verb is spelled "to wed" (marry). The abbreviation (Wed.) is for the weekday Wednesday.
espouse, marry, mate
There is nothing less or more than being married, if that is what you mean! However, if you mean the old-English term, "Marry", as in "Interjection Archaic.(used as an exclamation of surprise, astonishment, etc.), then it could be something stronger, such as "God's Wounds!" As an example, a Shakespearean character might say, "Marry, I'll not allow it!" The superlative could be, "By the gods! I shall not allow it!" But for marry, meaning to be wed, there is no superlative. One is either wed or not wed.
roger bacon was not wed, for he was a monk and then monks did not marry
I will be very merry (happy) when I marry (wed) Mary.
Yes, effective June 1, 2014, it is legal for same-sex couples to marry in Illinois.
Morally speaking, yes, it is discrimination to deny same-sex couples to wed. However, church and state beg to differ.
The word wed is a verb (wed, weds, wedding, wedded or wed); to marry someone; to combine one thing with another.We plan to wed in the spring, perhaps in May.They've been wed for twenty two years. Or, They've been wedded for twenty two years.
Promise to be wed.
No. Wed is a verb meaning get married. We'd is a contraction, though. (Notice the apostrophe.) We'd is a contraction of we had or we would.
Churches that support same-sex marriage are not permitted to legally marry church members who wish to wed. Churches that oppose same-sex marriage cannot be forced to perform same-sex marriages.
The person you eventually marry is your future husband, before you are legally wed.