Crossword clues for nuns
nuns
- Sisterhood members
- Order followers
- Goldberg and Field roles
- Convent group
- "Sister Act" sisters
- Women with orders
- Women who wear habits
- Usually unrelated sisters
- They take vows
- They have habits
- Soul sisters?
- Some pigeons, e.g
- Some MonasteryGarments.com customers
- Some Catholic school teachers
- Some are in the habit
- Sisters who don't necessarily have the same parents
- Sisters in a convent
- Single mothers?
- Religious women living in a convent
- Religious community members
- Quebec Island
- Pigeon breeds
- Ones wearing wimples
- Ninth step
- Mother's charges
- Many "Call the Midwife" characters
- Goldberg and Field played them
- Faithful sisters
- Convent members
- Convent managers
- Conical buoys
- Cloistered women
- Cloistered sisters
- Cloistered ones
- Cloistered group
- Cloister residents
- Cloister members
- Church ladies
- Characters in "Doubt"
- Certain sisterhood members
- Catholic schoolteachers, often
- Abbey people
- Abbesses and prioresses
- "Maria" singers in "The Sound of Music"
- "Black Narcissus" figures
- 'Sister Act' sisters
- ''Lilies of the Field'' characters
- ___ veiling, thin worsted fabric
- They have their orders
- Superior ones?
- "The Sound of Music" extras
- "Sister Act" extras
- Cloister inhabitants
- Cloistresses
- Women in habits
- "The ___ Story" (Audrey Hepburn movie)
- Women with vows
- Order members
- Church women
- They may be in black-and-white
- Creatures of habit?
- They're in a particular order
- Some parochial school teachers
- "The Sound of Music" chorus
- Ones with good habits?
- Convent residents
- Some buoys
- Certain buoys
- Sisters with habits
- Some pigeons, e.g.
- Sisters of Charity, e.g.
- Mother Teresa et al.
- Pigeons or weaverbirds
- Mother Seton's group
- Carmelites, e.g
- Convent dwellers
- St. Teresa's group
- Certain pigeons
- Carmelites, e.g.
- Conventuals
- *Ninth step
- Sisters seen in Vatican, unsurprisingly
- Hebrew letters
- Some sisters
- Wimple wearers
- Cloister group
- "Sister Act" roles
- Mother's helpers?
- Women with habits
- Habit wearers
- They have habits they can't shake
- Religious sisters
- Letters on dreidels
- "Finale Ultimo" chorus in "The Sound of Music"
- Wimpled women
Wiktionary
n. (plural of nun English)
Usage examples of "nuns".
It would not do, he reflected, to betray to conventionally-minded policemen his tenuous private hope that they would stumble upon one or two of those elusive nuns, profanely transformed.
One hundred sixty churches were burned to the ground, and nuns were removed forcibly from convents, "as though," wrote Due de Saint-Simon of an earlier conflict between the Spanish government and the Church, "they were whores in a bawdy house.
There were forty nuns at the convent, praying in the church, and living in the cloister.
Fiercely protective of her nuns, she felt more pain when it was necessary to enforce discipline than did the one being punished.
The nuns slept fully dressed on pallets of straw, covered with rough woolen sheets.
Carelessly, she made up her bed and stepped out into the long hall, where the nuns were lining up, eyes downcast.
The nuns prayed silently, but Sister Lucia's thoughts were on more important things than God.
The nuns stared back, wide-eyed, at the strange clothing the pair wore.
In the fourth century the pope decreed that girls could be permitted to become nuns at the age of twelve.
But if these men were the police, they would have known who the nuns were.
There was a relentless strength about him, an unshakable faith in his beliefs that reminded Megan of the nuns in the convent.
Because Megan and the other nuns were also being pursued, she felt a strong rapport with her new companions.
From the garden one of the nuns brought fresh flowers woven into a crown.
She would not be left alone before God, and in their stalls by her side, two nuns stayed through the rest of the day and night praying, while the Paschal candle flickered at her side.
As the last service they performed for their sister, two nuns started to drop soil softly onto her still body before they all returned to the church to say the psalms of penance.