亚洲网紅露点

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chartulary

[ kahr-chuh-ler-ee ]

noun

plural chartularies.
  1. a register of charters, title deeds, etc.
  2. an archivist.


chartulary

/ 藞迟蕛蓱藧迟箩蕣濒蓹谤瑟 /

noun

  1. a variant of cartulary
鈥淐ollins English Dictionary 鈥 Complete & Unabridged鈥 2012 Digital Edition 漏 William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 漏 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of chartulary1

1565鈥75; < Medieval Latin 肠丑补谤迟耻濒腻谤颈耻尘, equivalent to Latin chartul ( a ) charter + -腻谤颈耻尘 -ary
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Rules for the disposition of the income of a house were sometimes drawn up by a more than usually thrifty treasuress for the guidance of her successors, and kept in the register or chartulary of the nunnery.

From

Not a book, nor cross, nor chalice, register, nor chartulary remains.

From

It was from a modern transcript among these that Hearne edited the Historia Regum Angli忙 of John Ross or Rouse; and seventy-one documents from No. 23, which is an Hereford Chartulary, were printed by Rawlinson at the end of his History of Hereford, 8o, Lond.

From

The York Chartulary, Giraldus Cambrensis, and the Armagh records, make C锟絣e-d锟 = colideus and coelicula, as if c锟絣e was equivalent to the Latin colo.

From

In York, at the dissolution of monasteries, there existed an hospital called St. Leonard's, the chartulary of which tells us that in 836 King Athelstan found in St. Peter's Church, York, men of holy life, called Kolidei, who maintained out of scanty resources a number of poor men.

From

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chartulaChartwell