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neighboure

n. (obsolete form of neighbour English)

Usage examples of "neighboure".

I went to a neighbouring house where a woman received me in an empty room, which she told me she would let cheaply if I would pay three months in advance, and bring in my own furniture.

Vernai asked me to follow him into a neighbouring apartment, and to leave the other guests at the table.

After supper I told him that he and his daughter were to sleep in the room in which we were sitting, while I would pass the night in a neighbouring closet.

Lais of Milan, and enjoyed such a reputation for beauty that not only all the flower of Milan but people from the neighbouring towns were at her feet.

I took care that everything requisite for our disguises should be at hand in a neighbouring closet, unbeknown to my rascally page.

When the dessert, the fifty oysters, and all the materials for making the punch were on the table, the waiter left the room, saying that the ladies would find every requisite in the neighbouring apartment.

Pursued by the cheers of his admirers, he disappeared down a neighbouring alleyway, and the path closed behind him.

Eight other girls of similar age and rank inhabited the neighbouring suites, known respectively as Maids rose and Maids blanche.

The summer night was all but breathless, and the flames did not jump to neighbouring buildings.

To the left, a neighbouring house presented a chipped and peeling cornice.

Eyes still fastened upon the neighbouring table, she spooned her ice mechanically, unconsciously.

No sign even of the beggars, who might in milder weather have occupied neighbouring doorways.

We rose and slowly advanced towards Donna Cecilia and the advocate, who were just emerging from a neighbouring alley.

In order therefore to be able to follow them when they moved, as he felt certain they would before long, without attracting their attention, he left the table and making a circuit took up his position behind a neighbouring tree.

To say the truth, she had read much English divinity, and had puzzled more than one of the neighbouring curates.