Religious Jews do not verbalize wedding vows. Instead, the obligations of the husband and wife are spelled out in halakha (Torah law). The groom and bride, in the presence of witnesses and a Rabbi, sign and give each other copies of the Ketubah (traditional marriage contract), which enumerates some of their commitments to each other.
Jews don't exactly have vows. They have mostly blessings.
I wouldn't call it preferences. It would depend on the individual wedding situation itself. Some people write their own wedding vows.
Traditional wedding vows
The Gosselin's renewed their wedding vows in August 2008.
Wedding vows should be as original as the love you feel for the partner you are saying them to.
The vows are present at the beginning of the wedding ceremony.
court wedding vowells
Vows are what people write at a wedding. Vows can say anything but people using write what's in their heart.
Wedding vows or cermonies.
Those are the marriage vows you say at Jewish wedding. That specific sentence you quoted means: I am my beloved's, as my beloved is mine.
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hwey