CHRISTOPHER ROBINSON is one of the nations's top California wedding ministers or wedding officiants. Having been on many wedding television shows, some consider him a celebrity wedding minister. Officiants and ministers are intertwined in their roles. However, to be an officiate or officiant, you can be nonreligious or a religious minister, a judge or justice of the peace. A wedding minister, per se, is usually someone who is related to a ministry or a religion. Christopher is an attorney and also a notary. He is a wedding minister, however, he views is role as more of a wedding officiant as he feels it is very important to make a marriage legal and binding which is not something that is easily done by many wedding ministers. He is available for elopements and destination weddings and often can be there in a moment's notice.
Common MISSPELLINGS - we're used to it! However, to be a precise wedding officiant, you must know how to spell correctly or the Los Angeles County Clerk's office will reject your marriage license and you will have to pay for another. Don't worry if you can't spell, because the Officiant Guy can. Here are some common mistakes:
The true spelling of wedding is not weeding as some people think. Wedding is spelled with two d's. We are wedding officiants Los Angeles, not weeding officiants, unless of course, you are talking about flowers.
Officiant seems to be misspelled quite often. Many people spell officiant as efficient, officient, oficiant, eficient, oficient, ofishant, ofishent, and offishent. But, those versions are incorrect. So, to reiterate, Chris is a Wedding Officiant, not a Weeding Officient or Weeding Efficient or Weeding Ofishant, etc.
Another common misspelled wedding word is vows. Some people automatically spell it as Vowels. But vows are not vowels. Vowels are letters and vows are words. And wedding vows are spoken as a promise in wedding ceremonies.
Yet another typo is Ceremonys. Proper English calls for the y to convert to an ie when plural. So Ceremonies is the proper way to spell ceremonys.
Interestingly, many people also misspell Marry. It is not spelled with one R, as in mary, which is a woman's name. Nor is it spelled Merry, which means happy, though it should be because to marry is to be happy. Nor is it spelled Mery.