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Boleyn

[ US /boʊˈɫɪn/ ]
NOUN
  1. the second wife of Henry VIII and mother of Elizabeth I; was executed on a charge of adultery (1507-1536)

How To Use Boleyn In A Sentence

  • Henry's break from Rome is convincingly anatomised, and Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn both emerge as strong, self-willed players.
  • The shyppes sayle, boleynge [16] wythe the kyndelie ayre, The Rowley Poems
  • BookshopTudor House, 22 High Street, East Grinstead, West Sussex RH19 3AW, 01342 322669Nestled among the longest continuous terrace of 14th-century timber-framed buildings in the UK – complete with ancient black and white beams and weird carved faces, one reputedly of Anne Boleyn – this is more an experience than a mere bookshop. Independent bookshops in south-east England
  • He deftly sidestepped the falls of Anne Boleyn and Thomas Cromwell and was raised to the peerage.
  • Boleyn,” said Brandon, the word foul on his tongue. The Tudors: King Takes Queen
  • When he wrote to King Henry in unhopeful defence of Anne Boleyn and Thomas Cromwell, the convoluted sentences and sentiments show, not only a constitutionally timid man struggling to be brave (and all the braver for that), but a man uncomfortably capable of believing himself deceived and of seeing the world in double perspective. The Martyrdom of Thomas Cranmer - Sermon at Service to Commemorate the 450th Anniversary.
  • Some of these men had taken part in all the ceremonies of these years - Henry, Edward, Mary's funerals, the coronations of Anne Boleyn, Edward and Mary.
  • His wife was a cousin-german of Anne Boleyn and a sister of Catherine The Romance of Isabel Lady Burton
  • Pennington looked back, disheartened to see that the four inebriates wore the Boleyn colors and crest. The Tudors: King Takes Queen
  • In the time of Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn wished to give the post of abbess to a friend, but King Henry had scruples on the subject, for the proposed abbess had a somewhat shady reputation; he wrote, "I would not for all the gold in the world clog your conscience nor mine to make her a ruler of a house, which is of so ungodly a demeanour, nor I trust you would not that neither for brother nor sister I should so bestain mine honour or conscience. From John O'Groats to Land's End
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