¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cellarers
1. cellarer [n] - See also: cellarer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cellarers
Literary usage of Cellarers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. St. Thomas of Canterbury: His Death and Miracles by Edwin Abbott Abbott (1898)
"The cellarers ran round the cloister, by the way leading past their ...
The Archbishop went by two sides of the square, the cellarers by the other two. ..."
2. Transactions by East Hertfordshire Archaeological Society (1903)
"... but this name does not appear in the list of cellarers or sub-cellarers of
the Abbey in the " Registers of the city and diocese of St. Albans," no names ..."
3. The Nineteenth Century (1882)
"I think it must have been one of the cellarers, sir. I feel as if he were looking
at me sometimes. Can I find out the names of the ..."
4. The Publications of the Selden Society by Selden Society (1889)
"... S. Ives and hired from the said Godfrey his said house, so that the said
William the cellarer and other the cellarers his successors and other the monks ..."
5. Select Pleas in Manorial and Other Seignorial Courts by Frederic William Maitland (1889)
"... so that the said William the cellarer and other the cellarers his ...
whom they [the cellarers] chose to associate with them might have and hold the ..."
6. Royal Windsor by William Hepworth Dixon (1880)
"Before he sailed from Spam, she had begged him to bring over his own cooks, his
own cellarers. In her own house she could not guard him from the risk of ..."