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Definition of nunnery in English: nunnerynounPlural nunneries ˈnʌn(ə)riˈnənəri A building or group of buildings in which nuns live as a religious community; a convent. 女修道院;尼姑庵 Example sentencesExamples - Increasing emphasis on celibacy in tenth and eleventh-century English reform may have been a factor making direct kinship between bishops or abbots and kings rarer here, though that did not apply to abbesses and nunneries.
- Members of the nobility who would insure the efficient use of church lands and wealth would henceforth manage monasteries and nunneries.
- Close by was St Leonard's Priory, a Benedictine nunnery founded in the time of William the Conqueror, and mentioned by Geoffrey Chaucer in the prologue to his Canterbury Tales.
- In Scotland there were a dozen or so nunneries, mainly Cistercian, and in Ireland about ten of the 140 monasteries were nunneries, all of them for regular canonesses.
- In independent Tibet, monasteries and nunneries, numbering over 6,000, served as schools and universities, fulfilling Tibet's educational needs.
- In one of these dreams, I was living in a nunnery in Tibet on a large white lake.
- These monks and nuns live in their monasteries or nunneries all the rest of their lives, with no contact with the outside world.
- Are there any convents or nunneries for non-religious people?
- Subsequently, Heloise was sent to a nunnery and Abelard to a monastery, but not before he was castrated for his sins against Fulbert's niece.
- Here we were invited into a Tibetan nunnery, and on the outskirts, watched the arrival of pilgrims who visit the Muktinath temple complex that has structures sacred to both Hindus and Buddhists.
- What do you want me to do, dress in black and live in a nunnery?
- In enclosed places like monasteries, nunneries and prisons, the infection of one person usually meant the infection of all.
- Hamlet arrives, and reflects on suicide, action, and the fear of death before seeing Ophelia, whom he hysterically instructs to retreat to a nunnery: after he leaves, Ophelia laments that he has lost his reason.
- Even the sisters in the Hippo nunnery were warned that a woman can unconsciously and unintentionally throw a man off balance merely by a flashing eye.
- Isabel Thwaites was an orphan and had been placed under the guardianship of the Abbess of a nunnery at Appleton, near York.
- While Suor Marie Celeste's father defended the book he wrote, outlining his ideas on a heliocentric universe before the Inquisition, his daughter's letters tell him to wrap up warm and request money to help keep the nunnery running.
- Lacock Abbey, built as a nunnery in the thirteenth century, survives largely intact despite several campaigns of alterations and additions.
- You have to go to a desert, or to a monastery, a nunnery or an abbey.
- So she takes herself to a nunnery, very conveniently as it turns out.
- The princesses referred to their cloistered existence as ‘the nunnery.’
Definition of nunnery in US English: nunnerynounˈnənərēˈnənəri A building or group of buildings in which nuns live as a religious community; a convent. 女修道院;尼姑庵 Example sentencesExamples - While Suor Marie Celeste's father defended the book he wrote, outlining his ideas on a heliocentric universe before the Inquisition, his daughter's letters tell him to wrap up warm and request money to help keep the nunnery running.
- These monks and nuns live in their monasteries or nunneries all the rest of their lives, with no contact with the outside world.
- Even the sisters in the Hippo nunnery were warned that a woman can unconsciously and unintentionally throw a man off balance merely by a flashing eye.
- Here we were invited into a Tibetan nunnery, and on the outskirts, watched the arrival of pilgrims who visit the Muktinath temple complex that has structures sacred to both Hindus and Buddhists.
- You have to go to a desert, or to a monastery, a nunnery or an abbey.
- Members of the nobility who would insure the efficient use of church lands and wealth would henceforth manage monasteries and nunneries.
- What do you want me to do, dress in black and live in a nunnery?
- Increasing emphasis on celibacy in tenth and eleventh-century English reform may have been a factor making direct kinship between bishops or abbots and kings rarer here, though that did not apply to abbesses and nunneries.
- In enclosed places like monasteries, nunneries and prisons, the infection of one person usually meant the infection of all.
- The princesses referred to their cloistered existence as ‘the nunnery.’
- In Scotland there were a dozen or so nunneries, mainly Cistercian, and in Ireland about ten of the 140 monasteries were nunneries, all of them for regular canonesses.
- In one of these dreams, I was living in a nunnery in Tibet on a large white lake.
- Are there any convents or nunneries for non-religious people?
- Hamlet arrives, and reflects on suicide, action, and the fear of death before seeing Ophelia, whom he hysterically instructs to retreat to a nunnery: after he leaves, Ophelia laments that he has lost his reason.
- Subsequently, Heloise was sent to a nunnery and Abelard to a monastery, but not before he was castrated for his sins against Fulbert's niece.
- In independent Tibet, monasteries and nunneries, numbering over 6,000, served as schools and universities, fulfilling Tibet's educational needs.
- Isabel Thwaites was an orphan and had been placed under the guardianship of the Abbess of a nunnery at Appleton, near York.
- So she takes herself to a nunnery, very conveniently as it turns out.
- Lacock Abbey, built as a nunnery in the thirteenth century, survives largely intact despite several campaigns of alterations and additions.
- Close by was St Leonard's Priory, a Benedictine nunnery founded in the time of William the Conqueror, and mentioned by Geoffrey Chaucer in the prologue to his Canterbury Tales.
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