Cloister in a sentence as a noun

" A more modern style, though, would be "cloister of tears.

There's plenty of space to cloister oneself for a while if needed.

It's a former cloister, currently a school, and has no street name in its address.

"Times up, junior, let's return to our cloister and shutter the windows for the night.

However, it makes it difficult to drop a cloister into just the perfect spot...

What are you going to do, cloister your Congressperson in their office and forbid them from seeing people?

I insisted that our Cause could not expect me to become a nun and that the movement should not be turned into a cloister.

Cloister in a sentence as a verb

And like I said, instead of doing it with compound words, they do it more by joining them with the word "of", like: "cloister of tears," "the road of the whales," "this house of bones.

You know, we used to have institutions for well-paid knowledge workers to cloister themselves from outside concerns and devote themselves to work.

My partner and I both work freelance, and so we are aware of the potential to cloister up, particularly in a cold eastern European winter.

On the internet it's so easy to get sucked into an echo chamber and completely cloister oneself in some belief system or another.

"On the internet it's so easy to get sucked into an echo chamber and completely cloister oneself in some belief system or another.

We decided not to stress about people who couldn't make it midweek.- Venue for ceremony - The venue was a medieval cloister in the middle of Amsterdam.

And a handful of old nuns, the very last of their order, continues to climb the thousands of stairs up to the cloister that has been continuously occupied since who-knows-when.

Cloister definitions

noun

residence that is a place of religious seclusion (such as a monastery)

noun

a courtyard with covered walks (as in religious institutions)

verb

surround with a cloister, as of a garden

verb

surround with a cloister; "cloister the garden"

verb

seclude from the world in or as if in a cloister; "She cloistered herself in the office"