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alehouse

[ US /ˈeɪɫˌhaʊs/ ]
[ UK /ˈe‍ɪlha‍ʊs/ ]
NOUN
  1. a tavern where ale is sold

How To Use alehouse In A Sentence

  • Like today, London had many inns and alehouses throughout it and drinking was as popular then as it is today!
  • The alehouse is the terrible bane of the labourer. The Toilers of the Field
  • One of his examples was the case of a brewer who sold kegs of beer to alehouses on credit but charged a price high enough to cover an interest charge and the risk of default.
  • One of his examples was the case of a brewer who sold kegs of beer to alehouses on credit but charged a price high enough to cover an interest charge and the risk of default.
  • In frightening contrast fitzAlan looked tough and completely immovable, and bigger than ever in the confined space of the alehouse.
  • The streets were filled with alehouses, gambling dens and brothels, and the public was entertained by street performers, playhouses, and spectacles such as bear baiting.
  • Every night we have to go to a village, an alehouse, or an abbey and find someone who can guide us for the next day. The Red Queen
  • Like today, London had many inns and alehouses throughout it and drinking was as popular then as it is today!
  • Mr Thomson said: ‘It will be a traditional alehouse, selling our full range of beers plus lagers, Guinness and so on.’
  • He of these emissaries whose post was assigned him in this county of Bucks adventured to thrust himself upon a Friend under the counterfeit appearance or a Quaker, but being by the Friend suspected, and thereupon dismissed unentertained, he was forced to betake himself to an inn or alehouse for accommodation. The History of Thomas Ellwood Written by Himself
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