abbey
nounEtymology
From A.D. 1250 in Middle English abbey, abbeye (“convent headed by an abbot”) (compare archaic English abbaye), itself borrowed from Old French abaïe, abbaïe, abeïe, abbeïe (Modern French abbaye) from Late Latin or Ecclesiastical Latin abbātia, from Classical Latin abbās (“abbot”). Doublet of abbacy and Opatija. See abbot.
Definitions
The office or dominion of an abbot or abbess.
A monastery or society of people, secluded from the world and devoted to religion and…
A monastery or society of people, secluded from the world and devoted to religion and celibacy, which is headed by an abbot or abbess; also, the monastic building or buildings.
- Near-synonym: convent
- From 1199 to 1203 William Punchard was the abbot of the abbey of Rievaulx, which was part of the Cistercian order of monks.
The church of a monastery.
- No, we can't have alphabetical seating in the abbey. You'd have Iraq and Iran next to each other (laugh track)... Plus Israel and Jordan all sitting in the same pew (laugh track)! We'd be in danger of starting World War III (laugh track)!
›+ 8 more definitionsshow fewer
A residence that was previously an abbatial building.
The abele or white poplar (Populus alba).
- Ab'bey. The great white poplar: one of the varieties of the Populus alba.
- Abbey-lug, a branch of the abele tree.
A diminutive of the female given name Abigail, from Hebrew.
A diminutive of the male given name Albert, from the Germanic languages.
A British surname.
Westminster Abbey.
The precincts of the Abbey of Holyrood.
A place name
A place name:
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for abbey. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA