east end in English

noun
1
the part of London, England, north of the Thames and east of the City, including the Docklands.

Use "east end" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "east end" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "east end", or refer to the context using the word "east end" in the English Dictionary.

1. He took lodgings in the East End of London.

2. Shane Varner and Susanna Varner Conveyed 114 East End Ave

3. East End Cesspool Service - Serving all of Eastern Suffolk County

4. The last big East End brewery had lost its independence.

5. The type of speech used by people from the East End of London: You won't hear much real Cockney spoken unless you go to the East End.

6. James, a shopping center, is at the east end of Princes Street.

7. Brad is a true Cockney and supports the old East End Ways

8. The transepts have barrel vaults and the east end a semi-circular vault.

9. You and Erik get out to the East End, provide Bauer with backup.

10. You won't hear much real Cockney spoken unless you go to the East End.

11. Church is located in Annotto Bay, Saint Mary, on the east end of town

12. The main terminal complex is at the east end of Colonel Eileen Collins Boulevard.

13. It has been Conjectured that the west, as well as the east end, terminated apsidally.

14. Belle is Lesley Pearse’s latest book set in 1910 in the East end of London

15. Some of the hottest neighborhoods near Bomont, WV are East End , West Side , Downtown Charleston

16. Despite Glasgow's economic renaissance, the East End of the city remains the focus of social deprivation.

17. He lived in the top attic right, up against the east end gable of the building.

18. • He lived in the top Attic right, up against the east end gable of the building

19. East End Apparels was established in 1991 as a buying agency sourcing merchandise from the Indian Subcontinent

20. The abundance of semi- and unskilled labour led to low wages and poor conditions throughout the East End.

21. The Bridgetown High School and Bridgetown Elementary School are both located in the east end of the town

22. They instigated a reign of terror in London's East End, controlling their manor with a ruthless disregard for others.

23. An aisle running around the east end of a church, esp one that passes behind the Explanation of Ambulatories

24. A Cockney accent is one of the many British dialects, and is commonly associated with the East End of London

25. She also helped set up a convalescent home for patients from the East End after the cholera epidemic of 18

26. 26 On a Saturday morning there were often more lads down the East End dressed in khaki than in civvies.

27. The radicalism of the East End contributed to the formation of the Labour Party and demands for the enfranchisement of women.

28. His natural instincts led him away from the pomp and ceremony of regal splendour to the poverty of London's East End.

29. Ambulatory, in architecture, continuation of the aisled spaces on either side of the nave (central part of the church) around the apse (semicircular projection at the east end of the church) or chancel (east end of the church where the main altar stands) to form a continuous processional way.

30. There is an Ambry in the south wall near the east end, and the doorway is semicircular and of Norman character

31. Apsis (plural apsides) ( architecture ) A recess or projection , with a dome or vault , at the east end of a church ; an apse

32. Apse definition: a domed or vaulted semicircular or polygonal recess , esp at the east end of a church Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

33. Sir David Amess was born in the East End of London in 1952 and has been a Member of Parliament for 38 years

34. The West End/East End distinction in trades like shoe making and tailoring was well established by the end of the eighteenth century.

35. 26 Attempts to create vehicles of left-wing opinion have not succeeded; both the News-on-Sunday and the East End News failed miserably.

36. A Cockney is a certain type of Londoner: particularly, from the East End of London or, traditionally, born within the sound of Bow Bells

37. Bookstalls or barrows have been for nearly a century a feature of the East End of London, more particularly of Whitechapel Road and Shoreditch

38. Access from the Per-Albin-Hansson-Siedlung Ost is via an underground access at the station's west end and a bridge at the east end.

39. Baiting Hollow is a relatively small north shore hamlet located on the wonderful North Shore of Long Island, near the east end farms and vineyards

40. Bobby Pin Studio Located inside Allure Salon Group 320 East End Center, Suite 108 Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702 (570) 299-1995 Bobbypin[email protected]

41. The Cockney dialect is an English dialect spoken in the East End of London, although the area in which it is spoken has shrunk considerably

42. During a business trip to London, Maclaren was saddened to see that Scouts in the East End had no suitable outdoor area to conduct their activities.

43. In the late 1950s, NY 23 was realigned between the east end of the bridge and Claverack to follow a new, more southerly alignment via Bell Pond.

44. Whichever way your Buns swing - plant or meat - we’ve got your back! Eat in or take-away from the fun little east end boozer, The Three Compasses, Dalston.

45. Cockney, dialect of the English language traditionally spoken by working-class Londoners. Cockney is also often used to refer to anyone from London —in particular, from its East End.

46. So determined in fractions from the east end of the “ books.Mazdakite toze fibroma cynism Theban Bauxitite uncertified Xenical shipped in heavily loaded with 100 and counted, while yet expressing.

47. “Well,” Patsy explained, “the Norman Conks were a street gang from Norman Street in the East End of Glasgow and they used to fight with the Bridgeton Billy Boys

48. The Ambulatory (Latin: ambulatorium, ‘walking place’) is the covered passage around a cloister or the processional way around the east end of a cathedral or large church and behind the high altar.

49. It too is a hall church with tall octagonal piers and an Apsidal east end, one portal at the west front and two portals on the north, as well as the south, side, and …

50. See colonnade ‘The grape harvest is received and sorted in a Colonnaded courtyard at the east end of the site, where an oversailing roof canopy shades and signposts the entrance to the great vat shed.’