How To Use Cellar In A Sentence

  • Jim Devine said the £2326 of "joinery" was for storing personal and party political material in a pub cellar he was renting. Archive 2009-06-01
  • The restaurant, with its acre of tables, glassed and naperied; the ranges of telephone booths, all going it together; the cellars, a vast subterrene, with dusky avenues of lockers, each cluttered with beverages of individual predilection -- though I suppose that, after all, they were a good deal alike .... On the Stairs
  • In deep cellars stocked with winter ice the temperature was kept below eight degrees. Times, Sunday Times
  • Generally the better dealers avoid such goods, but in the case of the saltcellar, the dealer hadn't been able to resist. ON A WICKED DAWN
  • As a rule of thumb, the villages of Barolo and La Morra produce the most perfumed win es, while Monforte d 'Alba and Serralunga produce more structured, powerful wines that require substantial cellaring. In Search of Barolo
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  • We can certainly prefer not carrying endless scuttles of coal up from the cellar.
  • The bottles are then capped and placed in the cool cellars of the winery for up to 2 years.
  • It consisted of three stories and a large basement which contained servants quarters, pantries, laundry, cellars etc.
  • Grandfather sold the russets and the codlings and the pippins from his orchard, and those he didn't sell he stored in his pristine white-washed cellar, where huge black hams and sides of bacon were hanging from black hooks.
  • Minas knew everyone, having cadged dinners and so-called symposia out of most people who had a dining room or a courtyard that lay close to a good wine cellar. See Delphi and Die
  • A cellar that’s as much a conversation piece as the wine it stores – 400 bottles of luxury cuvee wines are contained in a 3m x 6m cement block, extruded from the shop into the public space. Artisan Cellars by Asylum
  • It is left to mature in the cellar and the final ripening stage takes place in a spruce wood box, where the cheese is kept for at least 3 weeks.
  • The house comprised a kitchen, a little hall, lower parlour, pantry, two cellars, a hall above stairs, an upper parlour and four chambers with cocklofts above.
  • A glass trap door looks through in to the cellar from the kitchen, and a circular staircase winds its way up to the tower. Times, Sunday Times
  • Young, robust wines in the cellar often give me “red wine headache” where older, softer (pinot, etc.) wines with polymerized tannins have little effect. Wine, allergies, histamines and sulfites - reactions from an allergist | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • An award-winning wine cellar boasts over 400 vintage wines, from which they can choose a bottle for dinner.
  • These wines are designed for cellaring and will benefit from age.
  • The cellars of 20 houses, the village hall and the communal cultural centre were inundated.
  • Their vegetable cellar caved suddenly yesterday.
  • A Russian guide told the visitors of the events on that dark night of Jan 17, 1918, when the Bolshevik Guards called the tsar and his family to the cellar and shot them. TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
  • The hot air flowing from furnaces in the cellar through the vents of the hypocaust went far to drive off the chill.
  • Descending into the cellar of the palace, he taped a speech agreeing to free elections and other liberal measures.
  • A moment later he had pulled away a strip of grass, and below it was a worn cellar door.
  • There was £699 paid to extra staff that had to be drafted in such as pages, footmen, cellar assistants and glass and silver pantry assistants.
  • This use of the available topography provided natural insulation that kept the cellars an even, cool temperature.
  • And whether they play in smoky cellar clubs or spacious concert hall, jazz musicians are drawing record crowds.
  • She was in a room that probably originally was a coal cellar.
  • During the frequent air-raids, people took refuge in their cellars.
  • Wisconsin Brewery Tour bells brewery profile cellar series craft fauerbach fresh hops jt whitneys lake louie mbr meet-up news old fashioned pairings point brewery prices pricing rowland's calumet saison thanksgiving thermo refur underage drinking wine altbier aran madden baltic porter barriques beer games best of 2008 Madison Beer Review Presents Beer Talk Today
  • Here and elsewhere, inconsistent hyphenization of “Salt (-) cellar” is unchanged. Early English Meals and Manners
  • And whether they play in smoky cellar clubs or spacious concert hall, jazz musicians are drawing record crowds.
  • Take the chance to tour its cellars, where the townsfolk once brewed their famous beers. The Sun
  • Beneath the chedi, in a cellar no human being had ever entered, was the ancient ho trai of the Asian clans, a place founded before Siddh¯artha was Buddha, indeed before Siddh¯artha was born. The Hunger
  • My vote ultimately was for Eric Levine, because CellarTracker as an innovative informational internet tool (and with each passing year so much more, including a forum, commerce, etc) that has burgeoned to over 1 million wine reviews since its inception is both astounding and far-reaching. Vote now! Wine Person of the Decade [the Naughties] | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • Wine room No longer just a musty old cellar, now you need a bespoke room to show off your precious collection. Times, Sunday Times
  • By varying the angle of reflected light, an illusion is created that the ocellar scales are intermittently emitting light, thus providing an explanation of Sanderson’s original account of the lizard 'switch [ing] on its portholes.' Archive 2006-11-01
  • Inca is famed for its old wine cellars converted into restaurants. The Sun
  • In the cellar, Manzanares creates drama through monumental architectonic volumes that highlight the warm tones of the oak barrels contained within them.
  • Cellini worked in France for a period in the early 1540's, during which time he fashioned his famous saltcellar. Archive 2008-03-01
  • This frustration seems odd since Cor. kz connects to the CellarTracker database of over one million wine reviews. Scanners and wine don't make a good blend--yet | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • Above the round glass or iron coverings of coal-cellars the foot-passengers slipped, "ricked" their backs, and swore as they stumbled, if they did not actually fall down, in the filth. The Mark Of Cain
  • Many systems are available, but most professionals agree that a ducted air handler dedicated to the cellar is the best way to go.
  • A few days earlier, I remember asking him if he would collect the wines from the cellar for that evening's function.
  • The room was carpeted, and there was a sofa in it, though a very old one, and two arm-chairs and a mahogany office-table, and a cellaret, which was generally well supplied with wine which Dobbs Broughton did not get out of the vaults of his neighbours, Burton and Bangles. The Last Chronicle of Barset
  • Deep down into the cellars we descended for what seemed like hours while I oohed and aahed at wine press after wine press, fast losing the will to live.
  • Typically, these are tube feet, pedicellaria, and gills.
  • A pensioner tripped over a pub's open cellar doors and broke his neck, an inquest heard.
  • The cellaret is a tin vessel, in which ices are kept for a short time from dissolving. The Book of Household Management
  • But scattered through its half-deserted rooms, state bed - chambers and the like, hung the works of more genuine masters, still as unadulterate as the hock, known to be two generations old, in the grand-ducal cellar. Imaginary Portraits
  • Open one, drink half, cellar them both for six months, and then test the difference.
  • He must have a cellar, racks for the beer [called stillage], and the manpower and commitment to properly set up the beer every night.
  • Set in what looks like a vast wine cellar, the walls and ceilings of the main room are exposed brick, as is the private back room space that holds up to 140 people.
  • A stone doorway of Gothic form and a kind of almery or safe exist in its cellars. Vanishing England
  • There is a spacious kitchen with huge original fireplace, as well as utility room, wine cellar and storage vault. Times, Sunday Times
  • World-class winemaker Susana Balbo says she separates the barrels in her cellar into two categories: the signature (read expensive) and the crios, or children. The Roanoke Times: Home page
  • Even if I do get out into the outer cellar unbound, what can I do?
  • Private sales are difficult because only an expert knows if the wine has been cellared correctly.
  • In a joke worthy of the painfully verbose Professor Dorr, the film may have plenty of cellars, but it certainly has no Sellers.
  • The new bottle shape caught the interest of contemporary wine merchants because it was ideal for "binning" wine horizontally in cellars for long periods of time.
  • I proceed down the stairs where neatly stacked frou-frou stilettos and sturdy Dr Marten boots sit on each step, past the well-stocked wine cellar and into the chic rustic minimalism of the kitchen.
  • There is ample room in the cellar for reds and whites. Times, Sunday Times
  • To avoid one-sided matches they must conduct a mini World Cup among the qualifiers and the cellar teams of the last World Cup.
  • The cellar of an old hotel is built on top of the door to the beyond.
  • The accommodation comprises a fully fitted farmhouse kitchen, salon, dining room, three bedrooms, cellar, and floored loft.
  • The outdoor area is far more appealing than the inside area, though it is comforting and cozy down the stairs and inside the cellar.
  • They emerged in the dusty, cobwebbed cellar full of old crates and barrels.
  • Polyzoa and the pedicellariæ of Echinoderms, between Ichthyosauria and On the Genesis of Species
  • The entrance was by way of a flight of steps descending from the side-walk to what was properly the cellar of the building. COFFEE-HOUSES AND DOSS-HOUSES
  • Neither a minimum effort to embrace this "second choice plot" with a clear, social commitment as a real attach to prohibition and its social putrefactive actions or the need to put on top of emergence priorities the drugs law reform and definitively send the DEAs and the Reagans/Dubya philosophy to the horrors cellar.... Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant Added To Toronto Fest Lineup | /Film
  • From its four hands hung the crystal saltcellar that had been a wedding gift from her mother. The Lives of Felix Gunderson
  • These wines are being cellared under perfect conditions with accurate temperature and lighting.
  • A cellar, where they would moulder away until he no longer had need of her services. MISS MELVILLE REGRETS
  • The concrete floors in the cellar and the garage had been ripped up by pneumatic drills. AFTERMATH
  • His larder is well supplied with poultry and wild fowl, his cellar contains "lashings," not only of "Parliament and pot," or "John Jamieson" and illicit "potheen," but of port and sherry, claret and champagne. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • The van had a hollow bottom, the kitchen had been built over a cellar and the stairs concealed a broom cupboard. Superdog! Action plans that work for a happy and well-behaved pet
  • At the Kittling Ridge Estate there are guided tours of the winery and distillery, with its vast fermentation cellars, copper pots and oak barrels.
  • “His wife makes a lovely chatelaine, and Oom Hendrik has assumed the congenial functions of cellarer and chaplain.” The Five of Hearts
  • The conditions they lived in were atrocious: overcrowded lodging houses, cellars, and garrets, shanty towns in the insalubrious districts beyond the town walls.
  • In the cellar were the central heating boilers and an emergency electricity generator.
  • Among recent vintages, 2002 has been lauded as the best since 1985, offering relatively rich reds that can drink well now or be cellared.
  • Dirty winemaking still exists of course and over the years experience has taught me that filthy cellars produce filthy wine.
  • It was really an admirable little dinner; the claret was a famous one from the Anglemere cellars, and warmed to a nicety; the coffee was perfection; Sparling's ministrations left nothing to be desired; and yet Drake sank into his easy-chair after the meal with a sigh that was weary and wistful. Nell, of Shorne Mills or, One Heart's Burden
  • Every time you went through a door into a classroom or a door in the corridor you had to swipe your card through an electronic card reader, and this was logged into an anonymous grey hard drive in the cellar and stored for posterity.
  • Assuming that a counterfeiter does not wish to be caught, would it not make much more sense to fake wines that would need to be cellared for twenty or thirty years and which are made in quantities of 20,000 or 30,000 cases instead of a barrel or two? Natural wines, premox, chenin blanc, 07 Port and Rhone – John Gilman | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • There is a secret cellar buried under ground which has been bricked up for many years.
  • In the solera system, wine from many vintages is matured in the cellars in separate casks.
  • Their vegetable cellar caved suddenly yesterday.
  • The elevator, with a bump, returning from the cellar opened simultaneously with the street door.
  • Team workers said water had oozed into the cellar and the iron box was rusted and it will take great skill to open the iron box.
  • The bags were found to contain coal dust and ended up sitting in the cellar for many years until the bill was settled.
  • They were busy packing the root cellar with parsnips, canning their ox tongues and making their tourtieres and petes-des-soeurs, or driving the dogsled down the hill for a barrel of water.
  • There are saunas, wine cellars, gyms and home cinemas. Times, Sunday Times
  • The secret to success in keeping the ale perfectly clear on a rolling railway carriage was that the beer was decanted into special containers, said David Atkinson, joint cellarman.
  • He must light the fire in the coal cellar under the stairs, open the back door, then come up them very quickly and light the paraffine puddles on each step, then sit down here again and cut his throat. The History of Mr. Polly
  • Brothers and sisters work in the cellars, stockrooms and vineyards.
  • Gorgeous now, or cellar it until 2018 and beyond for richer, nuttier flavours. Times, Sunday Times
  • If you are trying to decide if a certain bottle is going to be as good as advertised, I would recommend using Cork’d or Cellar Tracker, which offer a collection of ratings from various people who have owned or consumed specific wines and noted their tastings. White wine, red wine, the frontal cortex, spooky store – sipped and spit | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • They hurriedly set about constructing fortified positions in the sewers, cellars and vaults which honeycombed the entire ghetto.
  • And firefighters spent more than 12 hours pumping water from the cellars of four houses in Morley.
  • It is also ready to drink, unlike Vintage, which needs to be cellared for some time.
  • David's other great hobby is his cellar, and the wine list at the Peat Inn is comprehensive without being in the least daunting.
  • Each ocellus comprises a common lens, a few hundred photoreceptor cells in groups of two to seven with a central rhabdom complex, and a synaptic neuropil where the receptors synapse onto large and small ocellar interneurons.
  • There were already many thousands of wounded German soldiers lying uncared for in the Stalingrad cellars. IN LOVE AND WAR
  • Who would have thought a scene involving a key and wine cellar could be so thrilling? Times, Sunday Times
  • The parallel that the story sets up here, between cellars, bodies and concealing walls that never quite manage to do their job well enough is, I think, enticingly explored. Burying The Past « Tales from the Reading Room
  • The cellarer's and other storerooms were, apparently, on the west side, and there seems to have been a smaller guesten-hall to the south-east. Bell's Cathedrals: The Cathedral Church of Rochester A Description of its Fabric and a Brief History of the Episcopal See
  • Those books were down in the literary cellar - next to the garbage cans. Times, Sunday Times
  • When they pull a bottle from the cellar, they can deduct the amount from the log to keep inventory accurate.
  • Yesterday we spied her, as her own funeral played out, bereft in a dank cellar. Times, Sunday Times
  • Wes's greatest triumph was undoubtedly the time he removed the grating from the coal cellar outside Skeldale House.
  • The stopcock and boiler are two floors below in the cellar.
  • There is a small cellar bar, a sun terrace, a large garden and small heated outdoor swimming pool.
  • Heartiest Procellaria aequinoctialis forworn stock company Overpass Sandiver cato dionysius Craigslist | all for sale / wanted in san diego
  • I have tried cellaring these wines and almost invariably the results are disappointing.
  • it was pitch-dark in the cellar
  • The servant at Blackwood Castle (Grimsby, played by Artur Binder) tries to frighten Jane by placing a snake in her bed (one of many he cares for in the cellar); a neighboring inn begins to see unprecedented seasonal business from visitors (Horst Tappert as "Douglas Fairbanks," CARMEN, BABY's Uta Levka) showing unusual interest in Blackwood Castle... and each other; and the two seemingly harmless old fogies playing chess in the inn's tavern are using a tricked-out chesspiece to send messages to the snake-caring servant. Archive 2006-04-23
  • A local farmer stocked the cellar with a cartload of potatoes, onions, carrots, and apples that had to last the winter. PEARL BUCK IN CHINA
  • Then Carne, stepping warily, unlocked the heavy oak door at the entrance of the cellarage, held down his lantern, and fixed with a wedge the top step of the ladder, which had been made to revolve with a pin and collar at either end, as before described. Springhaven
  • It is plain as a pikestaff that if exposed to the incredulous view of the Taxpayer, who, by now, has a pretty clear view of some of the potential abuses, the floor of the House of Commons cellars would soon be awash with the blood of MPs caught with their grubby hands in the till. 'Shred & Bury': The New Westminster Watchword
  • The cellar door had masked what was an underground subway of some sort.
  • She unlocked the cellaret and stood for a moment with the bottle and glass pressed to her bosom. Gone with the Wind
  • The glass in the tram car windows melted; stocks of sugar boiled in bakery cellars.
  • He announces that there are invisible demons in the cellar, and that they claim that the house is legally theirs.
  • The light was very dim down in the cellar, and before I knew it some other man had thrust a pannikin into my other hand. THE SPIKE
  • After spending seventeen minutes in blackness, trying to fumble the lock of the cellar open, Jack Moore kicked the door open with a curse and began climbing the stairs.
  • Mattresses were brought up from the cellars and pitched all over the corridors: meals consisted of sandwiches and Victory Coffee wheeled round on trolleys by attendants from the canteen. Nineteen Eighty-four
  • The tour of the cellars and the wine were a delight. The Sun
  • I've cleaned out all the urns in the tea cellar, blown the dust out of the Hydrogen Mainframe, and now I'm alphabetising our mugs.
  • Ramey Wine Cellars A NUANCED VISION | Hyde Vineyards in Napa, source of a great Ramey Chardonnay David Ramey was driving on a dusty road through the land of tequila and mezcal when he had what he describes as his "coup de foudre"—otherwise known as his road-to-Mexicali moment—and realized, improbably, that he wanted to make wine. Wines That Favor Balance Over Power
  • The chance came when the wine was transferred to a new oak cask in the cellar under a hospital in Strasbourg where it has always been kept. Times, Sunday Times
  • The youth played the gallant, and just as another might entertain his _innamorata_ at a champagne supper _en tete a tete_ in a private room, he led Cadine into some quiet corner of the market cellars to munch apples or sprigs of celery. The Fat and the Thin
  • Soon afterwards, Biddy, Joe, and I, had a cold dinner together; but we dined in the best parlor, not in the old kitchen, and Joe was so exceedingly particular what he did with his knife and fork and the saltcellar and what not, that there was great restraint upon us. Great Expectations
  • If you arrive when the cask is tapped, you'll get to see the cellarman (or "landlord" or "publican", etc.) tap the cask. Long Island Beer Events
  • I delivered silver salt-cellars - present from West Heath school - very beautiful and much admired.
  • From Lenn Thompson: Cornerstone Cellars 2004 Howell Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon What We Drank
  • I ate and drank late into the night with his neighbors who insisted on sharing home cured hams and well cellared bottles. Wine Person of the Decade - nominations open! | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • Their vegetable cellar caved suddenly yesterday.
  • the cellar was dark; moreover, mice nested there
  • Kit picked herself off the cellar floor, her arms wrapped around her body as curls of smoke arose from what was left of her camisole. Slice Of Cherry
  • O how happy was he in that year who had a cool cellar under ground, well plenished with fresh wine! Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • You need patience, suitable conditions and a healthy bank balance to get into the business of cellaring the great red wines until they each their peak.
  • When the great social reformer Lord Shaftesbury visited one house, he went into the cellar - where a family was living - and found that the sewage from a nearby cesspit had leaked right under their floor boards.
  • They all desire it, _gospodar_, from the Grand Duke in his beautiful palace to the _moujik_ in his cellar -- they all desire my lovely book! The Book of All-Power
  • At least they now have a building without all forms of rot and woodworm, and without pigeons in the roof and who knows what in the cellars!
  • There is ample room in the cellar for reds and whites. Times, Sunday Times
  • The markup made it much too expensive for the Bella Sorella's cellar. FLIGHT LESSONS
  • “They make up a balanced account with Heaven, as our old cellarer used to call his ciphering, as fair as Isaac the Jew keeps with his debtors, and, like him, give out a very little, and take large credit for doing so; reckoning, doubtless, on their own behalf the seven-fold usury which the blessed text hath promised to charitable loans.” Ivanhoe
  • The van had a hollow bottom, the kitchen had been built over a cellar and the stairs concealed a broom cupboard. Superdog! Action plans that work for a happy and well-behaved pet
  • He used to be a big drinker - he used to spend £10,000 a year laying down wines for his personal cellar.
  • If you're pushing the boat out, the sprawling Penfolds Grange room has its own gym, a two-person shower, twin free-standing baths and its own mini-wine cellar.
  • Spare bedrooms or large closets make good drying rooms, but hot attics and damp cellars generally do not.
  • Neither a minimum effort to embrace this “second choice plot” with a clear, social commitment as a real attach to prohibition and its social putrefactive actions or the need to put on top of emergence priorities the drugs law reform and definitively send the DEAs and the Reagans/Dubya philosophy to the horrors cellar…. Nicolas Cage is Werner Herzog’s BAD LIEUTENANT | Obsessed With Film
  • In the house they had now she did the wash in a dim cobwebby space under the cellar stairs, on a newer machine than the tub-shaped one that had seized his hand in the Willow basement; this machine had a lid that closed, and a spin-dry phase in its cycle instead of a wringer. The Best American Erotica 2006
  • In Jonathan Franzen's novel The Corrections, Alfred Lambert, a retired railway engineer, sits in the cellar of his house, struggling with his advancing Parkinsonism and a string of Christmas lights.
  • The life of a milkman is a busy one, but I found time to mumble my Greek roots as I trotted in and out of the cellars. From the Bottom Up
  • [Westminster] near the said church, with a soler and chamber at one end of the hall, and with a buttery and cellar at the other. English Villages
  • A stickler for perfection, she would inspect the cellars at night to make sure everything was right.
  • My face had the hospital pallor, and, with my long hair and beard, I know I looked "snaggy" like a potato that has been forgotten in a dark corner of the cellar. Three Times and Out: A Canadian Boy's Experience in Germany
  • Raucous, sometimes almost spiritual singing, pushes from cellars, echoing and cannonading off the narrow whitewashed alleys.
  • But if they find a rat in the cellar, or rabbits start burrowing in their prize rose beds, they are on the phone like a shot.
  • Two of those cellars have vaults supported on central pillars in almost monastic manner and are ideal for parties or suppers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Cellars should be frequently cleaned and disinfected, using for the purpose some of the well-known disinfectants, as formaline, bleaching powder, or a dilute solution of carbolic acid. Human Foods and Their Nutritive Value
  • It's especially useful in lofts or cellars, and will also dispose of bath and/or shower waste through the same pipes.
  • ££ lains they dig great cellars and grottos, and strike a hole about a foot square, ten or twelve feet into the hill, which all the summer long blows a fresh air into the cellar, so that the wine in those cellar* drinks almost as cold as if it were in ice. Omniana, or Horae otiosiores
  • Do I really have to schlep all that junk down to the cellar?
  • Cellars of most apartments in the low-lying area were flooded, with cars and two-wheelers submerged in water.
  • Beside the playhouse was the "house in earnest," which has become a "belilaced cellar hole," and, behind it, a brook "Too lofty and original to rage. 'Hard to Understand, but Easy to Love'
  • Behind the head came the bloated, baglike,, limbless body, as big as one of the colossal wine vats in King Ario-stro's cellars. Conan Of The Isles
  • In another project in Wimbledon by cellarmakers Smith and Taylor (www. smithandtaylor.com), the £ 100,000 room contains a bespoke humidor and a section dedicated entirely to Dom P é rignon, with bottles that appear to be floating, suspended on metal cradles, framed on either side by shelving specifically designed to store them in their original coffret (gift boxes). The Evolution of the Wine Cellar
  • But I am willing to admit, since the truth is out, that it has long been my custom in preparing an article of a humorous nature to go down to the cellar and mix up half a gallon of myosis with a pint of hyperbole. Further Foolishness
  • When it struck the second boot it clanged sonorously, like an old, dented gong, upended in a cellar. BEHINDLINGS
  • But I decided to place my trust in the hands of the Fleece's cellarman and ordered a pint of Theakston's XB.
  • Lavinia rose and walked toward an octagonal cellaret; opening the lid, she took out a decanter of sherry and two glasses. Soul
  • In spite of the usually accepted fact that smuggling can only prosper in secret, Poole became a sort of headquarters for all that considerable trade that found in the nooks and crannies of the Dorset coast safe warehouses and a natural cellarage. Wanderings in Wessex An Exploration of the Southern Realm from Itchen to Otter
  • I suppose if you built a house on the land, you would have a ready-made wine cellar.
  • But thi faither never puts thee i 'th' cellar hoile when thaa's naughty, does he? ' Lancashire Idylls (1898)
  • By grasping this projection, the cellarman could slide the bit back and forth, opening and closing the spigot.
  • Al-f-u-r-d" was escorted home then to the cellar where the seance was a trifle more animated than usual, at least "Al-f-u-r-d's" cries so denoted. Watch Yourself Go By
  • As he stepped off the last creaking stair and onto the cold stone floor of the cellar, a shiver ran up his spine.
  • There was the old cellaret with nothing in it, lined with lead, like a sort of coffin in compartments; there was the old dark closet, also with nothing in it, of which he had been many a time the sole contents, in days of punishment, when he had regarded it as the veritable entrance to that bourne to which the tract had found him galloping. Little Dorrit
  • A thorough review of storage requirements can uncover desires for wine cellars or walk-in fireproof vaults.
  • Romantic images and bucolic country scenes of happy grape pickers, hillside vineyards, and dusty bottles in old cellars are featured in all the brochures.
  • The royal palace was splendid and reputedly contained a large wine cellar.
  • He would go down into the cellar tomorrow and put down some rat poison.
  • The gangs usually get into the cellar of a building that is undergoing renovation work and then make a hole through the wall into neighbouring cellars. Times, Sunday Times
  • It took many years to restore this fine, moated 17th century château and its cellars.
  • The wines were exported in cask and bottled and cellared there. Vintage port: 1948 Taylor, 1945 Fonseca, 1927 Niepoort | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • Wine room No longer just a musty old cellar, now you need a bespoke room to show off your precious collection. Times, Sunday Times
  • I do know that the story involves the legendary Phinn McCool, some American cowboys, a pooka a species of human Irish devils endowed with magical powers named Fergus MacPhellimey and a cellar full of leprechauns. Flann O'Brien: Tall Tales, Long Drink
  • Beneath the house are wine cellars, underground parking and storage space allotted to each property. Times, Sunday Times
  • They have an enormous kitchen in the cellar somewhere. Times, Sunday Times
  • Under the sideboard stands a cellaret that looks as if it held half a bottle of currant wine, and a shivering plate-warmer that never could get any comfort out of the wretched old cramped grate yonder. Mens Wives
  • The bride could not find anyone home until she ventured into the cellar.
  • It give the dwelling-house and three thousand dollars, gold, to the girls; and it give the tanyard (which was doing a good business), along with some other houses and land (worth about seven thousand), and three thousand dollars in gold to Harvey and William, and told where the six thousand cash was hid down cellar. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  • Tonight: the Frank Vascellaro, "Who-ligan" side of the argument. Minneapolis/St. Paul Breaking News, Weather, Video, Traffic and Sports for Minnesota from WCCO-TV
  • Downstairs is a Tyrolean-style bowling alley and cellar bar.
  • She can also arrange and book cellar visits and restaurants. Times, Sunday Times
  • All the drinks below are very palatable, however, and have the ability to be cellared and drunk as required.
  • I remember speaking to a woman who was a prison officer "looking after" hindley. she told me about the "beautifull" gay marriage of 2 inmates where hindley was a bridegroom! what a picture of a woman who procured children for rape, torture and death now being a bridegroom at a gay wedding in a prison .... do gooders are ruining the society they live in by rewarding and comforting scum like hindley - and in this case fritzl who in life is a really nasty, weak, pathetic and pointless individual ... footnote: - Elisabeth is so traumatised by the torture she was subjected to by her pointless "father" that she cant yet be interviewed about her "life" in a cellar. New Statesman
  • There are ample cellars - one entirely clad in glazed tiles, like a dairy. Times, Sunday Times

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