House or dwelling where friars or members of certain religious communities live.
1At last, however, they emerged into the little friary in the wood.
2The case involved a little dissolved friary he had bought near the Cripplegate.
3Born at Nola near Naples, he entered in his fifteenth year the Dominican friary.
4It might have happened in a friary all the same.
5Thousands of people from the North attend the friary and its peace and reconciliation centre.
6However, the guardian of the friary has confirmed there would be no more retreats next year.
7There was no building back then, just a Portakabin in the grounds of the Capuchin friary.
8Sir, -I was walking to work the other morning and I passed the local Franciscan friary.
9During excavation work on the Cecelia Street site, archaeologists uncovered the remains of a 13th century friary.
10FOURTEEN priests were kept in the Suzdal friary prison, chiefly for having been untrue to the orthodox faith.
11ARCHAEOLOGISTS excavating a site in Dublin's Temple Bar have found the remains of a 13th century Augustinian friary.
12Go over a small bridge, turn right at a T-junction and continue to the friary carpark overlooking Sheephaven Bay.
13He said the winters were cold in Paris, just as they were in England, and the friary was cold.
14Every inch of it, from the friary to the petrol station, becomes a canvas on which they can create.
15Over the centuries, the friary was demolished, apart from one small stretch of wall, and its exact site lost.
16However, many traces of the lost Greyfriars church and the friary buildings are believed to lie under the car park.