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4 Sentences With "snickelway"

How to use snickelway in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "snickelway" and check conjugation/comparative form for "snickelway". Mastering all the usages of "snickelway" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Part of the stone wall of the fifteenth-century north aisle is still to be seen, and forms part of the southern exterior wall of no. 23 the Shambles and of the south wall of the Snickelway which leads to Whip- Ma-Whop-Ma Gate. The Hall is currently used as a café.
It was largely demolished in or before the 18th century, but two walls survived, incorporated in later buildings. In 1939, demolition of later buildings revealed the two surviving walls of the house, and also the bases of the pillars of the undercroft, and the base of a garderobe shaft. The shaft and pillars were three-and-a-half feet below the current ground level, and so were covered over, but the walls were preserved, and the former interior of the building made into a small courtyard, so that the remains can be viewed from the inside. They are accessed by a snickelway, running between numbers 50 and 52 Stonegate.
18-22 Coney Street The street runs north-west from the junction of Spurriergate and Market Street, to St Helen's Square. New Street leads off the north-east side of the street, as does a snickelway leading to the Judge's Court hotel, while several snickelways lead from the south-west side down to the River Ouse, including Blanshard's Lane, and paths leading to City Screen. While the street retains numerous historic buildings, most have had their street-level frontage rebuilt during the 20th-century. Notable buildings on the north-east side include the 15th-century 16-22 Coney Street, 24 Coney Street which was built about 1600 but includes part of an earlier building, the early-18th century Judge's Court hotel, and 36-40 Coney Street, dating from the 1780s.
Lady Peckett's Yard, named after the wife of a former Lord Mayor of YorkJones, Mark W. A Walk Around the Snickelways of York A Walk around the Snickelways of York, by Mark W. Jones The entrance to Lady Peckett's Yard, leading through the buildings to the right of the shop Finkle Street, possibly derived from Old Norse or Danish words meaning angle or bend The Snickelways of York, often misspelt Snickleways, are a collection of small streets and footpaths in the city of York, England. The word Snickelway was coined by local author Mark W. Jones in 1983 in his book A Walk Around the Snickelways of York, and is a portmanteau of the words _snick_ et, meaning a passageway between walls or fences, ginn _el_ , a narrow passageway between or through buildings, and alley _way_ , a narrow street or lane. Although the word is a neologism, it quickly became part of the local vocabulary, and has even been used in official council documents, for example when giving notice of temporary footpath closures.

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