meeting-house
1meeting-house — (n.) also meetinghouse, 1630s, from MEETING (Cf. meeting) (n.) + HOUSE (Cf. house) (n.) …
2meeting house — meeting houses N COUNT A meeting house is a building in which certain groups of Christians, for example Quakers, meet in order to worship together …
3meeting-house — n a building where Quakers (=a Christian religious group) pray together …
4Meeting house — A secular meeting house in the U.S. state of Vermont is primarily used for a town meeting. A meeting house describes a building where a public meeting takes place. This includes secular buildings which function like a town or city hall, and… …
5meeting house — noun columbine of eastern North America having long spurred red flowers • Syn: ↑honeysuckle, ↑Aquilegia canadensis • Hypernyms: ↑columbine, ↑aquilegia, ↑aquilege • Member Holonyms: ↑g …
6meeting-house — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms meeting house : singular meeting house plural meeting houses a place where quakers meet and pray …
7Meeting House of the Friends Meeting of Washington — U.S. National Register of Historic Places …
8Meeting House of the Second Parish in Woburn — U.S. National Register of Historic Places …
9Meeting House Hill School — is located in New Fairfield, Connecticut and has approximately 750 students. Each homeroom averages about 24 students and each grade level has ten or eleven classes. The school, with grades 3 5, is in between the primary and middle school grades …
10Meeting House Hill, Delaware — Meeting House Hill is an unincorporated community in New Castle County, Delaware, United States.[1] References ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Meeting House Hill, Delaware …