Yes!
Jewish wedding
The Chuppah symbolizes the house that the couple will build their future in.
it's a wedding ceremony. The chuppah itself is what the bride and groom stand under, but most people call the ceremony itself a chuppah
I think it is pronounced with a silent c, so it would be hu-pah
Chuppah (wedding canopy) Kethubah (marriage contract) Seven blessings "Behold you are betrothed to me..."
At a Jewish wedding the groom stands next to the bride, on her left; both of them facing Jerusalem.
The wedding arch or arbor, chuppah is meant to replace the alter when a couple chooses to marry outside. It is a long standing Jewish tradition that the marring couple have something to kiss under. The Chuppah, arbor, arch fall into play and take the place of the alter inside a church or Temple.
A Chuppah is basically a canopy for a Jewish couple to be married under. It usually would have a cloth, sheet, or a tallit streched on four poles or sometimes just held up by people. A Jewish couple would conduct their ceremony under this canopy which sympolizes the home they will build together.
Don't you mean "canopy?" It's called a huppah. The Jewish wedding couple stands under it to symbolize their future home.
A chuppa is the canopy under which a Jewish wedding ceremony takes place. For a nice explanation, see the Answers.com topic on chuppa at http://www.answers.com/topic/chuppah .
The wedding canopy, or chuppah, represents the home of the new bride and groom. Having the sides open symbolizes an open invitation to guests into their home, as Abraham and Sarah did with their tents.