Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Place of religious seclusion ", 8 letters:
cloister

Alternative clues for the word cloister

Word definitions for cloister in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ At No. 4/183 were the cloisters and church of the Czech Barnabite Order, founded in 1626. ▪ Courtyards and cloisters are pools of shadow and lamp-light. ▪ St. Francis of Assisi originally founded the cloister which now encloses ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cloister \Clois"ter\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Cloistered ; p. pr. & vb. n. Cloistering .] To confine in, or as in, a cloister; to seclude from the world; to immure. None among them are thought worthy to be styled religious persons but those that cloister themselves ...

Usage examples of cloister.

The small room under the eaves held a cloistered ambience, offering warm sanctuary from the storm outside, hermitage, as well, from the fashionable beau monde and all the obstacles and impediments that world could impose.

The cloisters have entirely disappeared, but a series of round-headed arches, formed of stucco, may conceal a stone arcading similar to that hidden by the Early English facing of the north wall.

To strengthen it Lord Grimthorpe built buttresses, naturally following the division of the upper part of the walls, but thereby cutting across the arcading of the cloister walk in a most ugly fashion.

Tonight the same young man who had so curiously watched the Baptist weeks before stood alone within the solitude of the cloisters and gazed soberly above him.

John noted among them men who had been debating doctrine in the cloisters the day of the overthrow, and others who had questioned the Baptist at Bethabara.

The overall structure, with its retaining walls, cloisters, massive pillars, and courtyards within courtyards, covering thirty-six acres, was virtually a carbon copy of the First Temple, which is to say, ironically, it was an ancient and thoroughly pagan Phoenician or Canaanite design.

It was a powerful organ, and there was no doubt that it would take the cloistered stillness of the Cosmopolis dining-room and stand it on one ear.

Eadulf told her solemnly as they deposited the jug at her cubiculum and then went out into the quietness of the cloisters.

I strongly suspected that Margot had cloistered herself within the spun-sugar confines of her home, so I retreated to the Embarcadero Center and loitered on the level where the pedestrian walkway linked it to the condominium complex.

And with eighty-two delicious females cloistered in the school building and living there, it was apparent to him that he would have a virtually unlimited source of flagellatory pleasures.

This quiet, cloistered but not inactive nor unexciting life in these most ancient and fructuous groves of academe is what I want.

As always when Gerund met her here, he was conscious of how Gyro, as she came down those steps, had to force her mind out from the cloister of Barbe Barber back into the external world.

Nature had given her a disposition which had become so intensified by indulgence that the cloister was unbearable to her, and I foresaw the hard fights I should have to undergo.

The next day I dined with Mengs, and the day after that I was accosted in the street by an ill-looking fellow, who bade me follow him to a cloister, as he had something of importance to communicate to me.

In the room that he shared with Hakeem, Tancred opened the window that looked directly onto the cloistered quarter of wealthy Venetian merchants.