Get Free Checker

vicarage

[ UK /vˈɪkæɹɪd‍ʒ/ ]
NOUN
  1. an official residence provided by a church for its parson or vicar or rector

How To Use vicarage In A Sentence

  • The vicarage house is a handsome brick building in the Gothic style.
  • But after eight months he is still at the vicarage, takes no services at St James's and remains on compassionate leave.
  • Police found the antique gun in a grandfather clock at Holy Rood vicarage in Swinton.
  • It was upon this untrodden area that the Vicarage windows looked out with discouraging blankness. IN REMEMBRANCE OF ROSE
  • They waited till the vicar had died before they knocked down the vicarage. LEARNING TO TALK: SHORT STORIES
  • The overall situation will probably mean that, in time, the community will have to become more aware of what needs to be done to maintain four churches, two priests houses, a vicarage and a community centre.
  • He first acquired the vicarage of Sutton-on-the-Forest, later gaining a second living at Stillington.
  • It is, above all, an account that starts in a Victorian vicarage.
  • Pat offered to drive him to the vicarage and back, but he was adamant in refusal, mounted his bicycle, and pedalled off.
  • But Austen stayed at home in the vicarage, and modern theorists have found it easy to project their own ideologies onto her seemingly blank slate.
View all