gaol|gaols in English
noun
[dʒeɪl]
prison, jail (British)
Use "gaol|gaols" in a sentence
1. > Borough, Bridewells, Compters, Houses of Correction, Liberty Gaols and Town Gaols > Odiham Bridewell
2. He would be incarcerated in the cells of different gaols.
3. Exploring gaols, Bridewells and other forms of detention, 1500-1800
4. The court was all Bestrewn with herbs and sprinkled with vinegar, as a precaution against gaol air and gaol fever
5. He could wind up in gaol.
6. He got five or seven years in gaol.
7. Why he went to gaol, for instance.
8. the crime, the longer the gaol sentence.
9. He had been in gaol when that occurred.
10. Strikes by prison officers underline the need for reform in our gaols.
11. He also risked being arrested and put in gaol.
12. The castle had been used as a gaol.
13. For his pains the House of Commons put him in gaol.
14. Alexander's new gaol remains the nucleus of Maidstone Prison today.
15. Description: Draft reports (1824-1825), including abstracts of accounts of County Gaol at Fisherton Anger, Marlborough and Devizes Bridewells, and Salisbury Gaol (1823-1824)
16. Bathurst Gaol Bathurst Gaol, on the corner of Browning Street and Brook Moore Avenue, was designed by the great architect, James Barnet, and opened in 1888
17. The yeomanry arrived and carted forty-four rioters off to Oxford gaol.
18. I can not want a man who wants to see me in gaol.
19. As a leading suffragette, she endured the first of two spells in Holloway gaol in 190
20. By 180 the House was providing all the clothing for the prisoners in Bedford gaol.
21. Synonyms for Calaboose include prison, gaol, jail, jailhouse, penitentiary, coop, slammer, can, clink and cooler
22. The Affricate in words like gaol is of French origin (gele), from a Late Lat
23. The third storey of the town gaol was pierced by a doorway over which projected a beam.
24. Recaptured, he soon found that the Nuremberg gaol was more than a match for him.
25. Since he escaped from gaol, Tom has been living on a razor's edge , terrified of recapture.