Chantries [noun]
Definition of Chantries:
church room
Opposite/Antonyms of Chantries:
-
Sentence/Example of Chantries:
A chantry of the Confraternity of St. George, built on the north side of the new church, took the place of a north aisle.
Quite recently a new high-pitched roof has been placed over this chantry.
Nicholson thinks it probable this was the chantry of St. Roch; its revenues were valued at £2, 14s.
He founded and endowed a chantry in the cathedral, and made various bequests to his old colleges at Oxford, dying in London 1422.
I stripped off Doctor Chantry's unendurable bandages, and put on my clothes, for there were brambles along the path.
Doctor Chantry shuffled over the clean oak floor and introduced me to my appointments.
Skenedonk assured me that Doctor Chantry thought nothing of it, and there was no wound but a scratch.
After we had eaten supper Doctor Chantry and I sat with his sister where we could see the dancing, on a landing of the stairway.
Doctor Chantry asked me to wait in a lower corridor while he made some change in his dress.
Doctor Chantry turned from the promenaders below and, with slow and careful speech, gave me my first lesson in history.