meetinghouse|meetinghouses in English

noun

['mɪːtɪŋhaʊs]

place where people gather together; place of worship

Use "meetinghouse|meetinghouses" in a sentence

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

1. 1 synonym for Conventicle: meetinghouse

2. 1 synonym for Conventicle: meetinghouse

3. Whoever enters our meetinghouses should feel at home.

4. Build, maintain, and operate temples, meetinghouses, and other buildings.

5. Many members who were left homeless were sheltered in our meetinghouses.

6. We stood in the hallway of a meetinghouse and hugged and comforted each other.

7. This article was produced for Meetinghouse, a consortium of Anabaptist publications

8. Most progressive Anabaptist groups worship in church buildings, which they sometimes call meetinghouses.

9. The Clachans developed around the Presbyterian Kirks, or meetinghouses, and became the forerunners of the congregations

10. Synonyms for Conventicle include assembly hall, building, church, meetinghouse, gathering, assembly, meeting, congress, congregation and convention

11. We hallow and honor Him continually—in our meetinghouses, homes, temples, and all our labors.

12. What an inspiration to look into their faces as they crowded our own meetinghouse in the city of Reykjavík.

13. Their substantial stone meetinghouse with a vaulted ceiling soon became a Latter-day Saint meeting place.27

14. The meetinghouses were opened to provide shelter to all who needed food, clothing, blankets, and a temporary place to stay.

15. When he wasn’t busy at the Cottonwood First Ward meetinghouse, he was working odd jobs, doing Scouting activities, and spending time with friends.

16. When Nicholas first arrived at the meetinghouse, he saw that things had been scattered around, with papers, books, and furniture in disarray.

17. Every week the young men arrive early and stand outside the meetinghouse in rain, snow, or blistering heat, awaiting the arrival of the many elderly members in their ward.

18. I now had some responsibilities, things we would learn on Sundays in church as we would sit around the old coal stove down in the basement of the meetinghouse.

19. Simple instructions on how you can contribute your family’s accumulated information to Ancestral File are now available at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City and at the other centers in various stake centers and ward meetinghouses in the United States and Canada—and shortly, worldwide.

20. Conventicle comes to us from Latin conventiculum and ultimately from convenire, meaning "to assemble." Conventiculum means "place of assembly" (it was applied in particular to Roman Christian meetinghouses) or simply "assembly." The English "Conventicle" also originally meant "assembly."