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Example sentences for "inns"

Lexicographically close words:
innovations; innovative; innovator; innovators; innoxious; innuendo; innuendoes; innuendos; innumerable; innumerably
  1. An end to lovely country inns and summer balconies where they were dining together!

  2. There were certain inns they could reach by automobile where they could sit and dine and drink a bottle of wine or a pitcher of claret cup, and here she would muse on what they would do if they were only free.

  3. This is also the origin of the White Hart for a sign at the different inns and houses of entertainment throughout England.

  4. There were Tables d'hôte's at the minor Inns tolerably frequented, but none at the most fashionable; there the guests lived by themselves.

  5. The Inns I slept at were very good, and the roads by no means bad.

  6. The Ventas or Inns are in a State admirably corresponding to that of the high-roads.

  7. The third guild merchants, whose capital needs not exceed 8000 rubles, are the retail dealers of the towns and villages, they keep inns and workshops, and hold booths in the fairs.

  8. The best wine of a certain Abrahamof is usually charged for at the rate of six rubles in the inns of Novo Tcherkask.

  9. The metropolis, it will be seen, has no end of attractions, and for the traveller's accommodation the ancient inns are rapidly giving place to modern hotels.

  10. Exmoor is the only place remaining in the kingdom where the wild stag is still hunted with hounds, the season being in the early autumn, when all the inns are crowded, and on the day of a "meet" all the country seems alive.

  11. You are on the way to the Golden Bird; and this evening you will come to a village in which stand two inns opposite to one another.

  12. So he pursued his way, and by evening came to the village where the two inns were; in one they were singing and dancing; the other had a poor, miserable look.

  13. It is the same old story of dangers and wearinesses by the way, of German inns and German stoves and the troubles they brought him.

  14. The especial point of this dialogue is the difference between the inns of France and of Germany.

  15. In the larger inns a man shows you to the stables and points out a poor enough place for your horse.

  16. All this is then made the more effective by a counter-description of the swinish customs of the inns in Germany.

  17. There were two inns both of which had long sheds, strongly built with cells downstairs for men and a large room above for women.

  18. In Bryantown there were several stores, two or three taverns or inns which were well known in their days for their hospitality to their guests and arrangements to house slaves.

  19. I do not believe he ever flirts with the maids at the bars of the village inns when we buy our modest drop of beer or secure our ginger-ale.

  20. In Scotland there are far fewer cosy wee inns with stabling attached to them than there are in England; there is therefore greater difficulty in finding a comfortable place in which to bivouac of a night.

  21. I make a point of mingling in a kindly way of an evening with the villagers at the inns where my horses are stabled.

  22. At present we are encamped on the road, two miles from Worksop to the south.

  23. If the inns were uniformly cleanly and agreeable, as much could not be said for the villages, which were sometimes decidedly dirty.

  24. He occupies the place, but he doesn't fill it, and he has guests from the neighbouring inns with ulsters and Baedekers.

  25. But streets and inns in Italy are the vehicles of half one's knowledge; if one has no fancy for their lessons one may burn one's note-book.

  26. The inns were cheap too, and the landlord let no one depart dissatisfied with his bill.

  27. To return to the inns, Fyner Morrison, a traveler in 1617, sustains all that Harrison says of the inns as the best and cheapest in the world, where the guest shall have his own pleasure.

  28. In two respects England has greatly changed for the traveler, from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century--in its inns and its roads.

  29. In colonial days the accommodations and prices at inns were regulated by law.

  30. The worst inns were in London, and the tradition has been handed down.

  31. The journey was altogether disagreeable, even to a traveler used to the rough jaunts in an American wilderness: the inns were miserable; dirt, noise, and insolence reigned without control.

  32. Were all old inns just like this, Mrs. Pitt?

  33. It is supposed that there are no less than twenty-five inns named in Dickens's 'Pickwick Papers' alone.

  34. The females were mostly at the windows, or on such elevated stands as favoured their view, and the party from the Wigwam occupied a large balcony that topped the piazza of one of the principal inns of the place.

  35. Still its inns were of respectable size, well piazzaed, to use a word of our own invention, and quite enough frequented.

  36. Beauvais always served her in her room at the inns where we stopped, and I think, on the whole, she made the journey with ease of mind and comfort of body.

  37. The highway was choked with coaches and baggage-wagons and horsemen and horsewomen, and the inns on the roads that led from Radewitz were like camps, so many persons being forced to lodge out of doors.

  38. It is no uncommon thing in the best inns of Scotland to have shutting-up beds in the sitting-rooms.

  39. Douglas Mill is a single house, a large inn, being one of the regular stages between Longtown and Glasgow, and therefore a fair specimen of the best of the country inns of Scotland.

  40. No beds in the inns at Falkirk—every room taken up by the people come to the fair.

  41. The long vacation in the Inns of Court, which Jonson had in mind, lasts from Aug.

  42. In 1616 he suggested to Villiers the creation of a special commission for the purpose of granting licenses to keepers of inns and ale-houses.

  43. Jonson dedicates Every Man out of his Humor ‘To the Noblest Nurseries of Humanity and Liberty in the Kingdom, the Inns of Court.

  44. We have been into three or four inns to-day," he said.

  45. According to the imperial proclamation, great inns were erected upon the principal highways, and every traveller stopped, examined, and the whole affair explained to him.

  46. Those who threw it you gave it you by mistake, I warrant; and what I would have you do is, to go to Dunstable, and try if you can at either of the inns find out the person who gave it to you.

  47. So Anne and I will go to both the inns in Dunstable, and try to find out this chaise--John Nelson's.

  48. Many Priests of my acquaintance, being unable to meet with safe lodgings when they came to London, used to put up at inns till they had settled the business that brought them.

  49. I arranged, moreover, that he should be brought not to any house, but to a certain field near one of the Inns of Court, which was a common promenade, and that the messenger should walk there alone with him till I came.

  50. Blackwell, George, the Archpriest; his house near the Inns of Court cxxx, informed of Watson's plot by Fr.


  51. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inns" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.