manors in English

noun
1
a large country house with lands; the principal house of a landed estate.
Agecroft Hall, a Tudor manor house , was shipped to the United States piece by piece and now draws 20,000 visitors each year.
noun
    manor house

Use "manors" in a sentence

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

1. He received manors and rents from the earl.

2. Sussex manors, Advowsons, etc., recorded in the Feet of fines, Henry VIII

3. The Bedpost Furniture Store is located 3001 NE 6th Ave, Wilton Manors / Oakland Park, Florida 33334

4. Sussex manors, Advowsons, etc., recorded in the Feet of fines, Henry VIII

5. Sussex manors, Advowsons, etc., recorded in the Feet of fines, Henry VIII

6. All Advowsons that have been separated from their original manors are Advowsons in gross

7. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading Sussex manors, Advowsons, etc., recorded

8. Athelstan directed that each of the manors owned by the crown should be subject to an

9. Out of his manors, William chose to reside at Hammoon, and his descendants certainly lived here until the seventeenth century.

10. The surname CAdieux was first found in Brittany (French: Bretagne), where they are recorded as an ancient family with lands, manors, and estates.

11. These simple truths are present in the Baronages that conclude the county tours in all editions of Britannia, and in the descents of manors that Camden traces in his perambulations.

12. Currently enveloped by 3 buildings in a 48-hectare township, Camella Manors Bacolod is an RFO condominium in Bacolod with an open space reserved for future commercial development inside the condo community

13. The surname Blanke was first found in Normandy (French: Normandie), the former Duchy of Normandy, where this ancient family were part of the Royal House of Blois and held a family seat with lands, titles, estates and manors

14. The surname Cater was an official name, "the Cater," derived from the Old French ale catour, a title meaning a buyer of groceries for the gentleman's house.They were in charge of maintaining provisions in manors and castles.

15. The surname Le Blan was first found in Normandy (French: Normandie), the former Duchy of Normandy, where this ancient family were part of the Royal House of Blois and held a family seat with lands, titles, estates and manors

16. In 1187 a William de Botreaux gave the advowsons of the churches in his manors of Molland and Knowstone in Devon, and of the church of Forrabury in his Cornish manor of Boscastle, to the Abbey.

17. Commission to Sir Thomas Wise, Sir Richard Butler, Sir Francis Vivian, John Mohun, Vice Warden of the Stannaries, Richard Eresy, and Thomas Gowen [?] and Peter Ball, auditors of the Duchy of Cornwall, to examine the tenures in villenage of the tenants of the King's Assessionary manors in co

18. At Durham, accounting material survives from the offices of the bursar, terrar, Cellarer, almoner, chamberlain, communar, feretrar, hostillar, infirmarer, and sacrist, as well as accounts from the manors owned by the priory; accounts for livestock and mines; accounts from proctors responsible for the administration of the priory's possessions lying further away in Scotland, Northumberland, and

19. Borough english, a custom prevailing in certain ancient English boroughs, and in districts attached to them (where the lands are held in socage), and also in certain copyhold manors (chiefly in Surrey, Middlesex, Suffolk and Sussex), by which in general lands descend to the youngest son, to the exclusion of all the other children, of the person dying seised and intestate