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St. John's   Listen
St. John's

noun
1.
A port and provincial capital of Newfoundland.  Synonym: Saint John's.
2.
The capital and largest city of Antigua and Barbuda; located on the island of Antigua.  Synonyms: capital of Antigua and Barbuda, Saint John's.






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"St. john's" Quotes from Famous Books



... possible. However, we were now somewhat familiar with such undertakings, half military, half naval, and the thing to be done on the Edisto was precisely what we had proved to be practicable on the St. Mary's and the St. John's,—to drop anchor before the enemy's door some morning at daybreak, without his having dreamed ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 118, August, 1867 • Various

... Churches in Adelaide is limited to two, Trinity Church and St. John's. The former was originally built of wood, and may be said to be coeval with the colony itself. It has of late however been wholly built of stone, and under the active and praiseworthy exertions of Mr. Farrell, the colonial chaplain, an excellent and commodious school-room ...
— Expedition into Central Australia • Charles Sturt

... money lent) left his rooms in dudgeon, and went to Bartlet Court, Clerkenwell. Here Fanny died on February 2, 1760, of a disease which her physician and apothecary certified to be small-pox, and her coffin was laid in the vault of St. John's Church. Now the noises in Cock Lane had ceased for a year and a half after Fanny left the house, but they returned in force in 1761-62. Mr. Parsons in vain took down the wainscotting, to see whether ...
— Cock Lane and Common-Sense • Andrew Lang

... of the Melliah he set off early, riding by way of St. John's that he might inquire at Kirk Michael about the Deemster.. He found the great man's house a desolate place. The gate was padlocked, and he had to clamber over it; the acacias slashed above him going down the path, ...
— The Manxman - A Novel - 1895 • Hall Caine

... good at carpentry, or things of that sort, they did very well at cod-splitting, or, as it was termed, "flaking", and spreading the fish to dry on the flakes, as the structures were called which had been erected on a sunny headland, after the fashion of the fish-flakes at St. John's, Newfoundland, whence the idea ...
— A Countess from Canada - A Story of Life in the Backwoods • Bessie Marchant


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