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Family room

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Possible Answers:

DEN.

Last seen on: –Daily Boston Globe Crossword Saturday, 2 December 2023
LA Times Crossword, Sun, Mar 12, 2023 – “Excuses, Excuses!”
NewsDay Crossword January 3 2023

Random information on the term “Family room”:

A parlour (or parlor) is a reception room or public space. In medieval Christian Europe, the “outer parlour” was the room where the monks or nuns conducted business with those outside the monastery and the “inner parlour” was used for necessary conversation between resident members. In the English-speaking world of the 18th and 19th century, having a parlour room was evidence of social status.

In the early 13th century, parlor originally referred to a room where monks could go to talk, derived from the Old French word parloir or parler (“to speak”), it entered the English language around the turn of the 16th century.

The first known use of the word to denote a room was in medieval Christian Europe, when it designated the two rooms in a monastery where clergy, constrained by vow or regulation from speaking otherwise in the cloister, were allowed to converse without disturbing their fellows. The “outer parlour” was the room where the monks or nuns conducted business with those outside the monastery. It was generally located in the west range of the buildings of the cloister, close to the main entrance. The “inner parlour” was located off the cloister next to the chapter house in the east range of the monastery and was used for necessary conversation between resident members.

Family room on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “DEN”:

Historic Denbighshire (Welsh: Sir Ddinbych) is one of thirteen traditional counties in Wales, a vice-county and a former administrative county, which covers an area in north east Wales. It is a maritime county, bounded to the north by the Irish Sea, to the east by Flintshire, Cheshire and Shropshire, to the south by Montgomeryshire and Merionethshire, and to the west by Caernarfonshire.

Under the Local Government Act 1972, the use of Denbighshire for local government and ceremonial purposes ended on 1 April 1974, with the creation of the new county of Clwyd. A different county of the same name was created on 1 April 1996, for modern local government purposes, covering a substantially different area from the historic county.

Denbighshire was created by the Laws in Wales Acts 1535-1542 from areas previously in the Marches. It was formed from Cantrefi taken as follows;

From the Lordship of Denbigh:

From Powys Fadog:

In the south and west of the county, the mountains of the Clwydian Range rise from 1000 to 2,500 ft (760 m) high. The east is hilly. There is some level ground along the coastal strip. The highest points are Moel Sych and Cader Berwyn at 2,728 feet (831 m). Pistyll-y-Rhaeader is a spectacular 240 feet (73 m) waterfall. The chief rivers are the Clwyd and the Dee. The River Conwy runs north along the western boundary.

DEN on Wikipedia

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