delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we are called upon to interpret the support provisions contained in an enrolled decree which divorced *206 the parties to this appeal a vinculo matrimonii more than a decade ago. The decree, entered in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County (Pugh, J.) on January 11, 1968, in addition to its pronouncement of divorce, incorporated by reference selected provisions of a property settlement and child custody agreement executed by the parties several months prior to the institution of the divorce suit. The issues in this appeal focus on the interaction between those terms of the settlement agreement which were incorporated into the decree and those left out of it.
In early November, 1967, petitioner Herman Goldberg and his wife, respondent Mildred Goldberg, recognizing that "certain unfortunate differences” portended the end of their twenty-seven year marriage, executed a property settlement and child custody agreement. Paragraph one of the understanding declared that:
[t]he husband shall pay to the wife for her support and maintenance the sum of $150.00 per week[ 1 ].... Said payments shall terminate upon the death of the husband or of the wife, whichever shall occur first, or, in the event of the subsequent remarriage of the wife, then upon such remarriage.
In subsequent paragraphs, the husband agreed to grant to the wife custody of the parties’ two children; to provide $125.00 per month as support for each child; to "keep and maintain a group hospitalization policy with surgical benefits for ... the wife, and .. . children until each of them becomes twenty-one years of age;” to pay college tuition for the children; to "provide and maintain a policy of life insurance, in which the wife is designated as beneficiary, in the amount of $10,000.00;” to "convey to the wife his interest” in the family home; to "giv[e] to the wife as her sole and separate property” all their furniture and other' personalty; to "divest himself’ of his interest in real property which he owned in common with his mother-in-law; and to *207 pay the wife $2,500.00 cash as well as her attorney’s fees. In exchange for these promises, the wife, for her part, agreed in paragraph two:
that the ... payments [set forth in paragraph one of the agreement] are adequate for her support and maintenance and that she accepts them in lieu of any other claim that she has or may have against the husband for support, maintenance, alimony or other claim upon the husband for her right to be maintained as the wife of the husband.
In addition, Mr. and Mrs. Goldberg relinquished all rights which each had in the property or estate of the other, and both recognized that "they have accepted the benefits of [the] agreement in lieu not only of their rights against each other in and to the property of each other during the lifetime of ea h, but in lieu of any right that either may have against the estate of the other. ...” At the request of the parties, the chancellor incorporated by reference into the decree of divorce paragraphs of the property settlement agreement numbered one (the quoted provision for the support for the wife), three (providing for child support), nine (granting child custody to the wife), and ten (terminating child support should the wife cease to have custody). There was no request by the parties that the remaining paragraphs, including number two, be incorporated into the decree, nor were they.
On June 21,1978, ten years after the decree in the divorce action was entered, Mrs. Goldberg petitioned the court in those same proceedings for an increase of alimony. By his motion raising preliminary objection, Mr. Goldberg urged that since the property settlement agreement was intended to be the final disposition of the parties’ rights and obligations, and since the provisions for spousal support in paragraph one of the agreement do not constitute technical alimony, 2 the chancellor was without authority to modify *208 the payments. When the husband’s preliminary objection was overruled, the respondent’s petition was presented to the court’s domestic relations master for consideration. Following his determination that "[paragraph [o]ne [of the separation agreement once incorporated into the decree] clearly meets the criteria of technical alimony,” the master recommended that the amount payable under the wife support provision of the 1968 divorce decree be increased to provide that the husband pay $1,010.00 per month. 3 This recommendation was accepted and effectuated by order of the trial court, and Mr. Goldberg appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. That appellate court, in an unreported opinion, agreed that the wife support provision of the settlement compact contemplated the payment of technical alimony, and since, in that context, the paragraph was incorporated into the divorce decree, its terms are properly subject to subsequent judicial modification. The intermediate appellate court cautioned, however, that "had paragraph two [waiving alimony] been incorporated into the divorce decree ... [that provision] may well [have acted] to bar the modification in question.” This Court granted certiorari to examine the propriety of the ruling. Since we now determine that the divorce decree made no provision for technical alimony, reversal is required. 4
*209
We commence our review of the circuit court’s order increasing the amount of support payments with the observation, disputed by neither party here, that the correctness of the chancellor’s action turns wholly on whether the monies paid to Mrs. Goldberg under the 1968 decree are properly viewed as technical alimony. This is so because a decretal award of alimony of this type, whether or not contemplated in a separation agreement of the parties,
Stevens v. Stevens,
Given these principles, Mrs. Goldberg asserts that, since the wording of the support provision contained in paragraph one of the agreement "conforms in every detail with the definition of technical alimony,” the decree incorporating that paragraph of the contract is subject to judicial modification, and if the language of paragraph two waiving alimony, which was not incorporated into the decree, is deemed to be inconsistent, then it was "superseded by, and merged into, the decree.” This reasoning, in our view, is faulty
ab initio,
for the premise on which respondent rests her argument, that the separation agreement called for an award of technical alimony, is incorrect. Accordingly, the chancellor did not "[order] the [husband] to pay technical alimony,” but rather merely incorporated into the divorce decree, at the request of the parties, selected provisions of their agreement.
6
It is true that, in determining whether
*211
technical alimony has been awarded, the terms of the decree in the first instance should be consulted and if unambiguous are normally controlling. From this, it does not necessarily follow, however, that the unincorporated provisions of a separation agreement play no role in, and thus may not be examined as part of, this interpretative inquiry. For example, in this case, the divorce decree did no more than incorporate, simply by reference to the paragraph numbers of the agreement, four provisions contained in that understanding; thus, examining the divorce decree alone to ascertain the nature of the payments ordered is uninformative without reference to the agreement. See,
e.g., Dickey v.
Dickey,
supra; Schroeder
v.
Schroeder, supra; Stevens v. Stevens, supra.
In looking to the settlement accord to embellish the terms of the divorce decree, a court subsequently interpreting that order should not myopically focus on just those contract provisions incorporated by reference into it; rather, it seems obvious to us that the entire contract should ordinarily be examined to determine the legal effect of the decretal award. To hold otherwise would lead to untenable results. As an illustration, if in this case, unincorporated paragraph two, instead of waiving alimony, defined "support and maintenance” as used in paragraph one to be contractual, non-technical, non-modifiable, spousal support, petitioner’s approach would obscure the clear meaning of paragraph one as elucidated by the definition, resulting in an interpretation of the "support and maintenance” language in a vacuum, unaided by the crucial contractual definition. Distinct in their variation from respondent’s suggested analysis, our decisions make it clear that the entire agreement can be consulted in this context. Thus, in
Schroeder
v.
Schroeder, supra
at 463-65,
Since the two lower courts should not have focused only on those provisions incorporated into the Goldberg’s divorce decree, we turn briefly to set out the rules governing interpretation of contracts which influence the disposition of this case. Property settlement agreements, as all other contracts scrutinized under the law of this State, are subject to interpretation in light of the settled and oft-repeated principles of objective construction.
Orkin
v.
Jacobson,
We think the words of the agreement between the Goldbergs present no ambiguity and are expressive of their respective rights and obligations. It is entirely permissible for a party to waive his or her claim to alimony as long as this release is supported by valid consideration,
Frank v. Frank,
Judgment of the Court of Special Appeals reversed and case remanded to that court with instructions to vacate the decree of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County with direction to dismiss the petition.
Costs to be paid by the respondent.
Notes
. This provision was later amended by agreement to require payment of $650.00 per month.
. The generic term "alimony” is unfortunately often used by bench and bar to express all forms of spousal support, whether payable under decree or agreement and regardless of the power of the court of equity to modify them. This expanded use of the term alimony has caused the coinage of the
*208
phrase "technical alimony” when referring to a periodic allowance for spousal support payable under judicial decree which terminates on the death of either spouse or on the remarriage of the spouse receiving the payments. Brown v. Brown,
. Although the master suggested that his determination (the allowance is technical alimony) was "a finding of fact,” we conclude that the issue is predominantly one of law. Consequently, our review of this determination is plenary.
. The issue whether the court which divorced the Goldbergs was authorized to order technical alimony in the face of an agreement between them which precluded such an allowance is not before us.
See
Md. Code (1957, 1966 Repl. Vol. and 1981 Repl. Vol.), Art. 16, § 28 (separation agreement between husband and wife "shall be valid, binding and enforceable to every intent and purpose...”); Rice v. Rice,
. The Legislature, however, has provided that "any provision in fanyj deed or agreement [made between husband and wife alter April 13, 1976,] in respect to alimony, support and maintenance ... is subject to modification by the court ... regardless of the manner in which the provisions with respect to [these payments | are expressed,” unless there is a waiver or a specific statement that the payments are not subject to any court modification. Md. Code (1957, 1981 Repl. Vol.), Art. 36, § 28; 1976 Laws of Maryland, ch. 170, §§ 2, 3. Since the settlement agreement and divorce decree we here consider were finalized long before this statute became operative, we evaluate this case using the pre-existing principles.
. We see no special significance in the incorporation by the chancellor, at the request of the parties, of these particular contractual provisions. Once made a part of the decree, contractual obligations become subject to the enforcement powers of the court of equity, not the least of which of course is the contempt power.
See
Speckler v. Speckler,
. It may be suggested that the language used by the Court of Special Appeals in Schmertz v. Schmertz,
