The deed describes it as-- One hall situate in the manor of the said abbot and convent near the said church, with a soler and chamber at one end of the hall, and with a buttery and cellar at the other.
It is built of stone; in plan a hall with a story over it, and the soler at the upper end, approached by a stone newel stair built in a projecting buttress on the north side.
The upper chamber or soler has a good fireplace and chimney-piece of stone, with deeply splayed windows.
To the right would be the gable end of the chamber with soler over it; the soler would probably have a rather large arched and traceried window in the end, the chamber a smaller and perhaps square-headed light.
There was next "a chamber and soler at one end of the hall.
It has the hall with its great door and arched traceried window, and at the one end a chamber and soler over it.
The soler of a mediaeval house was the chief apartment after the hall, it answered to the "great chamber" of the sixteenth century, and to the parlour or drawing-room of more modern times.
Now the common arrangement of a small house at that date, and for near a century before and after, was this, "a hall in the centre, with a soler at one end and offices at the other.
For this the deed tells us the convent assigned--"One hall situate in the manor of the said abbot and convent near the said church, with a chamber and soler at one end of the hall and with a buttery and cellar at the other.
Clare is supposed to have been the "Soler hall" of Chaucer's Tale.
Soler Hall: the hall or college at Cambridge with the gallery or upper storey; supposed to have been Clare Hall.
It follows the usual type of fourteenth-century house, and consists of a fine hall, the lower part divided off by a screen, a soler of two stories at one end, and a kitchen at the other.
As he was retiring he beheld his faithful chamberlainSoler defending himself valiantly against six Moors.
Estevan Luzon, a gallant captain, fell fighting bravely by the side of the marques, who remained, with his chamberlainSoler and a handful of knights, surrounded by the enemy.
In his excitement he forgot the positive orders of San Martin to wait for Solerbefore attacking the enemy, and gave the word to charge.
The latter was to engage the attention of the enemy in front, without attacking the position, whileSoler marched upon his left flank and rear, when a general advance would decide the day.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "soler" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.