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minster

[ UK /mˈɪnstɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈmɪnstɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. any of certain cathedrals and large churches; originally connected to a monastery

How To Use minster In A Sentence

  • The somnolent Hampden conference suddenly started to come alive as he laid into Labour as a waste of space in Westminster.
  • He might have caused a storm in a teacup in the corridors of the Westminster press lobby as journalists squabbled over who had the story, whether it was attributable and who had told The Sun anyway.
  • There is an increasing feeling that MPs say one thing to constituents and something else in Westminster. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was a lively public speaker, a governor of two schools, and a member of Beverley Minster parochial church council.
  • And Bob and uh others … I was pointing a usage of the word enjoy in a specific way … made possible by todays culture of "enjoy" that is distinctly different from the way the Westminster catechesim uses the word. Reclaiming the Mission
  • They were primarily portraitists, but Thomas is now chiefly remembered for his dramatic Boadicea monument at Westminster Bridge, London, showing the fearsome warrior queen in her chariot.
  • Expenses figures from Westminster show he has resumed a busy schedule in the Lords.
  • A premature grab for a safe Westminster seat would be seen as naked opportunism. The Sun
  • This was the last mill, the brook now wending its way towards the Severn at Minsterworth.
  • The drawings themselves will be used to produce the zinc templates from which workmen in the Minster stoneyard will work when they begin to carve the replacement stones.
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