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manour
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Singular Plural
manour manours
1
Grafía obsoleta de  manor.
  • Ejemplo:

Thus ſhe liued , raigned, and dyed in Peace, and full of glory , celebrated by the tongues and pennes of the rareſt ſpirits of all Nations (yea euen enemies) of her time : till laſtly the God of Peace called her to a farre higher glory,by his vnpartiall meſſenger death, who ſeized on her at her Manour of Richmond.John Speed. The Historie of Great Britain Under the Conquests of the Romans, Saxons, Danes and Normans. 1623.

  • Ejemplo:

They being sworn and the charge given them, they fell to our business, finding the heir‐at‐law to be my uncle Thomas ; but Sir Robert [Bernard] did tell them that he had seen how the estate was devised to my father by my uncle’s will, according to the custom of the manour, which they would have denied, first, that it was not according to the custom of the manour, proposing some difficulty about the half‐acre of land which is given the heir‐at‐law according to custom, which did put me into great fear lest it might not be in my uncle’s possession at his death, but mortgaged with other to T. Trice (who was there, and was with my good will admitted to Taylor’s house mortgaged to him if not being worth the money for which it was mortgaged, which I perceive he now, although he lately bragged the contrary, yet is now sensible of, and would have us to redeem it with money, and he would now resurrender it to us rather than the heir‐at‐law (or else that it was part of Goody Gorum’s in which she has a life, and so it might not be capable of being according to the custom given to the heir‐at‐law, but Will Stanks tells me we are sure enough against all that.Samuel Pepys. The Diary of Samuel Pepys. 1662.

  • Ejemplo:

Given at our Manour of Greenwich , the fifteen of June , and of our Reigns of England , France and Ireland the ſeventeen, and of Scotland the fiftie two ſubſcribed by the Kings own Hand.David Calderwood. The true history of the Church of Scotland... 1678.

  • Ejemplo:

4. Beamont Maſter of the Rolls, did confeſs his Offences, who in his Office of Wards had bought Land with my Mony, had lent it, and kept it from Me, to the Value of 9000 l. and above, more than this twelve month, and 11000 in Obligations, how he being Judg in the Chancery between the Duke of Suffolk and the Lady Powis, took her Tittle, and went about to get it into his Hands, paying a Sum of Money, and letting her have a Farm of a Manour of his, and cauſed an Indeture to be made falſly, with the old Duke’s counterfeit Hand to it ; by which he have theſe Lands to the Lady Powis, and went about to make twelve Men perjured.Gilbert Burnet. The History of the Reformation of the Church of England. 1681.

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