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Answer for the clue "Religious abode ", 6 letters:
priory

Alternative clues for the word priory

Word definitions for priory in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. religious residence in a monastery governed by a prior or a convent governed by a prioress

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Priory is an electoral ward of Trafford , Greater Manchester , covering the northern and central part of Sale , including the Town Centre.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE alien ▪ The acquisition of Templar estates and of alien priories likewise enlarged the openings for royal clerks. ▪ Rather is it more closely related to the problem of alien priories . ▪ In September 1295 custody ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 13c., from Anglo-French priorie (mid-13c.), from Medieval Latin prioria "monastery governed by a prior," from Latin prior (see prior (n.)).

Usage examples of priory.

No, Sugar is in her rooms in Priory Close, forcing herself to plough on through The Art of Perfumery, by G.

Then Godwin remembered the oath that they two had sworn far away in the Priory at Stangate, and the love passing the love of woman which he bore towards this brother, and the duty of a Christian warrior whereto he was vowed, and hiding his face in his pillow he prayed for strength.

One prioress of Amesbury from the early 1300s, Isabel of Lancaster, spent much of her time not only outside the priory in family visits but also at court and with friends.

The sub-infirmarian to the priory was pale with fatigue and her shoulders hunched as she bent over the hollow body that the prioress had just quitted.

Priory was reconsecrated Roman Catholic and the Little Sisters took over.

In May, 1530, Elsing Spital, a house established by William Elsing, a charitable mercer, for the relief of the blind, but which had subsequently grown into a priory of Augustinian canons of wealth and position, was confiscated by the Crown.

Philip Starke, also of The Priory, Sutton Chancellorso it would seem the Warrenders had died out.

Although, no doubt, many of the ecclesiastics of the time were a disgrace to their profession, as in former days was William of Ledbury, who was prior of Malvern, yet there were good Catholics as well as good Lollards, and I instanced Prior Alcock, who even then was engaged in the rebuilding of Little Malvern Priory, and I thought people should be allowed to worship God in their own fashion without being considered sinful.

Reginald was the only Lord of Brecknock to be buried in the Priory Church .

Priory, but it was not until I had gone through Charterhouse Square and the congerie of narrow streets around Smithfield that eventually I came to a shopping precinct.

Very quiet was the wedding in the old priory church at Christchurch, where Father Christopher read the service, and there were few to see save the Lady Loring and John, and a dozen bowmen from the castle.

On the promontory washed on the one side by the slow stream of the Dorset Stour, and on the other by the no less sluggish flow of the Wiltshire Avon, not far from the place where they mingle their waters before making their way amid mudflats and sandbanks into the English Channel, stands, and has stood for more than eight hundred years, the stately Priory Church which gives the name of Christchurch to a small town in the county of Hants.

The exterior of the church of Christchurch Priory may be well seen from several points of view.

Priory vowed that no matter how long it took, these documents must be recovered from the rubble beneath the temple and protected forever, so the truth would never die.

As the Vatican closed in, the Priory smuggled their documents from a Paris preceptory by night onto Templar ships in La Rochelle.