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Example sentences for "fine church"

  • Bere Ferrers has a fine church, with some old glass in it and a very singular font, that looks almost as if it had been constructed out of a still earlier capital.

  • The Church of England is a fine church,’ said I; ‘I would not advise any one to speak ill of the Church of England before me.

  • There is a fine church, too, containing some interesting tombs and effigies of the now extinct Slingsby family, who were prominent here for many centuries.

  • It has a fine church, much rebuilt and gaudily decorated, with a tower containing no less than thirty-five bells and a clock face so enormous that it occupies a goodly portion of the wall.

  • St. Martin follows; a picturesque hamlet with a fine church, the last in the west of England to dispense with clarionet, flute and bass-viol in the village choir.

  • Chalke likewise boasts of a fine church, also cruciform and dating, so far as the chancel and north transept are concerned, from the thirteenth century.

  • The Church of England is a fine church," said I; "I would not advise any one to speak ill of the Church of England before me.

  • It has a fine church with a beautiful screen.

  • Columb Major has a fine church, which unhappily suffered from an explosion of gunpowder in 1676, when three boys carelessly set fire to a barrel of this explosive, which had been placed in the rood-loft staircase.

  • Callington has in it a fine church that is chapel-of-ease to Southill.

  • In Brittany she has a fine church at Pontivy Noyala.

  • It has a fine church resembling in plan its neighbour of Stoke St Gregory, being cruciform, with a central octagonal tower.

  • Mells possesses a fine church, several old houses, and a well-merited reputation for picturesqueness.

  • The antiquarian will, however, find here much to interest him, for there is a fine church, and the town has many ecclesiastical associations.

  • Martock, is a village wearing an air of antiquity, and possessing a fine church.

  • Tavistock's fine church is dedicated to St Eustachius, and it has a high battlemented tower crowned with slender pinnacles.

  • The buildings at the time of the Dissolution were very large, and there was a fine church, but of these only a Perpendicular tower adjoining the cloisters, and a large tithe-barn, are in a state of good preservation at the present day.

  • Paignton has a fine church, chiefly Perpendicular, but parts are of earlier work, and there is a most beautiful carved screen.

  • Some three miles below Selby is Hemingborough, where there is a fine church with a lofty spire (180 ft.

  • Public gratitude had found expression in a fine church or chapel, and this was included in Thacker's share of monastic plunder.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "fine church" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    fine blue; fine brown; fine church; fine cloth; fine clothes; fine condition; fine copy; fine country; fine fellow; fine girl; fine hair; fine large; fine open; fine order; fine polish; fine quality; fine sandy; fine specimen; fine spring; fine trees; finely divided; fluid ounces; like most; little over; negro woman; shaded lamp