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Example sentences for "banns"

Lexicographically close words:
banneret; bannerets; banners; bannock; bannocks; bano; banquet; banqueted; banqueters; banqueting
  1. Get round young Teddy, and then put the banns up.

  2. And the banns go up next week," murmured the boarding-master to himself.

  3. But to be married by banns is considered the most orthodox as well as the most economical way of proceeding.

  4. This motive they determined should be Rogron's marriage to Mademoiselle de Chargeboeuf; it should be announced that very day and the banns published on Sunday.

  5. Vinet had had the banns posted at the mayor's office in the afternoon.

  6. He says that you are not the messenger he expected, though you may be a deputy, and he vows he will not be so vilely used, and he will not give me up but will publish the banns to-day in Pitt, come what may.

  7. After a moment he looked up, saying, "Do you know that this morning the banns were published for the wedding of Lord Dunmore and your kinswoman, Miss Warren?

  8. They did not encounter again until the following Sunday morning, when the banns between Ruth and Reuben were called a second time.

  9. He learned later on that he was not absolutely either, but he gets a twinge out of "I publish banns of marriage," even unto this day.

  10. The banns have not been duly published, neither is there any priest here to marry them.

  11. A good banns law, however, could meet no objections and would yield valuable results.

  12. A revival under proper form of the old custom of publishing the banns is desirable.

  13. Neither Evan nor Ales was at church on the Sunday to hear the banns read the second time.

  14. I tell you that as true as I am Ole Nordistuen of Heidegaard, the priest might as well think of publishing the banns for the trolls up in the forest, as to give out such names from the pulpit as Marit's and your's, you puppy dog!

  15. I have come to request that the banns may be published for my son; he is to be married to Karen Storliden, daughter of Gudmund, who is here with me.

  16. The banns were published in the village church.

  17. The mention of the published banns disturbed her, and shook that proud and obstinate conviction which she had thus far entertained that the scene in the chapel was only a brutal practical joke.

  18. The banns were regularly published by the vicar of Dalton in Dalton Church, and in that chapel Edith Dalton was regularly and legally married to Leon Dudleigh by the Rev.

  19. John Crumb is to marry you next month, and the banns is to be said.

  20. You're wishing to have the banns said without any more delay?

  21. I believed the banns could be published whilst the consent was being worked for.

  22. If Lady Amelia will send Grace her consent, why wait for the banns to be published?

  23. Well, time may be saved by your publishing the banns at once, Frank.

  24. We'll put up the banns next Sunday; and in less than a month from to-day you two foolish people shall be one.

  25. I suppose when they two are married our banns may be put up in Bodmin Church," he wrote; "unless Hilda has any other objection to me.

  26. Then the banns have to be published three successive Sundays, and so we make out the eleven weeks, as I said.

  27. Neither banns nor licence were necessary, and the time and place were alike immaterial.

  28. So the banns were put up in church for three weeks, and all Cahokia was invited to the grand wedding.

  29. The banns will be put up next Sunday, and in three weeks she will be Madame Beauvois.

  30. Banns are to be asked on three holy days, and then the parties are to be openly wedded at the church door.

  31. He had the banns put up the first Sunday he was at home.

  32. In the course of the following November, her banns were published in the church on the heath, and also in Copenhagen, where the bridegroom lived.

  33. I kissed the ring till my lips almost bled, and then I gave it to my mistress, and told her that the banns were to be put up for me and the glovemaker the following week.

  34. A slave cannot marry without the consent of his master, for the vicar will not publish the banns of marriage without this sanction.

  35. Unless a marriage license is procured banns must be published in the parish in which the parties reside, and if they live in different parishes the banns must be published in each parish.

  36. No publication of banns is necessary in the case of a marriage under a bishop's license.

  37. In the case of Jews the banns must be published on three consecutive Saturdays or feast days.

  38. A marriage may be legally concluded without a marriage license if banns are duly published.

  39. The banns must be published on three Sundays in the parish in which the parties reside, and if they reside in different parishes the banns must be published in each parish.

  40. Before the marriage the parish priest must, on three successive holy days, publish banns in the church, and if any member of the parish knows of any impediment it is his or her duty to inform the priest.

  41. If the marriage is solemnized before a clergyman banns must be published from the pulpit for three consecutive Sundays, and the marriage must follow within three months.

  42. A valid marriage can take place only after formal publication of the banns and the solemn declaration of consent.

  43. For a civil marriage no publication of banns is required.

  44. The marriage ceremony must be celebrated in one of the churches where the banns have been published.

  45. Banns are published by announcing the coming marriage together with the full names of both parties, their birthplace, status and residence, on three consecutive Sundays or holidays.

  46. The Banns and the Ceremony After the formal engagement, when the dowry and contract had been agreed upon and signed, the publishing of the banns occurred.

  47. Commonly banns were published then, and condemned prisoners preached to or at.

  48. Before the marriage, a certificate of publication must be presented to the officiating clergyman, from the clergyman of the other parish in which the Banns were published.

  49. The Banns must be published on three separate (though not necessarily successive) Sundays.

  50. The marriage must be celebrated in one of the two parishes in which the Banns have been published.

  51. Banns published in false names invalidate a marriage, if both parties are cognisant of the fact before the marriage takes place, i.

  52. Banns may be forbidden on four grounds: If either party is married already; or is related by consanguinity or affinity; or is under age; or is insane.

  53. Seven days' previous notice of publication must be given to the clergy by whom the Banns are to be published--though the clergy may remit this length of notice if they choose.

  54. That he had already published the banns of her marriage left her gasping at his audacity.

  55. I publish the banns of marriage between Henry Colebrook, and Jane Maria Smith both of this parish.


  56. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "banns" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    banns; elopement; engagement; espousal; honeymoon; marriage; nuptials; troth; wedding