Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Instead, he bent his steps towards the four-roomed cottage which he called the Parsonage and found too large for his needs.
The White Wolf and Other Fireside Tales Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch 1903
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Framley Parsonage is the fourth of Trollope's six Barsetshire novels, mainly concerning the initial hostility and eventual approval of Lord Lufton's mother towards her son's love for the more humbly born Lucy Robarts; a substantial subplot concerns the financial problems of Lucy's brother Mark, who is the vicar of Framley and whose home therefore gives the book its title.
January Books 1) Framley Parsonage, by Anthony Trollope bopeepsheep 2010
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By 20th and 21st century standards, Framley Parsonage is a very graphic and explicit book when it comes to income and debt.
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Peter Tam/Photo Tours It later became a bed-and-breakfast known as the Parsonage Inn. Peter Tam/Photo Tours It's now a single family home, though the bedrooms all have in-suite bathrooms and are still marked with names, left over from the inn.
Queenly Restorations 2010
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Later, it became a bed-and-breakfast known as the Parsonage Inn. It's now a single family home, though the bedrooms all have in-suite bathrooms and are still marked with names, left over from the inn.
Viva Victoria! 2010
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Susanna Edwards, 1682, enters into some detail: 'She did meet with a gentleman in a field called the Parsonage Close in the town of Biddiford.
The Witch-cult in Western Europe A Study in Anthropology Margaret Alice Murray 1913
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The garden at the Parsonage was a great joy, with its thick hedge of fuchsias, and its beds of fragrant wallflowers, and its standard roses growing among the grass, and its clumps of Czar violets under the sheltered wall.
The Youngest Girl in the Fifth A School Story Angela Brazil 1907
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He led the procession to the Parsonage, which is a fine building in a good locality.
My life and work, 1885
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The minister's table was always a nicely-kept one; the Parsonage was a place where it was pleasant to abide; and so the guest-chamber of the Parsonage was seldom empty.
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"I love Christmas, I think it is a little bit over-commercialised and that one of the things about the Parsonage is the decorations are very traditional so we do offer something of the earlier traditions of Christmas," says Andrew.
BrontëBlog 2009
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