... are three words that, taken together, do not form a sensible question. Please try again.
nest
Convent, Cloister, or Nunnery
A nun lives in a monastery while a sister may live in a convent.
Monastery, abbey, convent, nunnery, priory, cloister.
Try "cloister, abbey, friary, priory, priorate, convent and nunnery". Hope that helped.
Governess. Jane Eyre is a governess at Thornfield Hall in Charlotte Bronte's novel "Jane Eyre".
"I go to the cloister to read because I find it peaceful."Cloister:N.1. A covered walk with an open colonnade on one side, running along the walls of buildings that face a quadrangle.2.a. A place, especially a monastery or convent, devoted to religious seclusion.b. Life in a monastery or convent.3. A secluded, quiet place.
There are a few which come to mind. In the monastic/convent tradition, mother superior, abbess, sister, novice for the divisions in the hierarchy of a convent or cloister. Deaconess is in common use in the Presbyterian tradition.
In the olden days, nuns were safely cloistered behind high convent walls, protected from the outside world.
In generic terms applicable to males and females, you can refer to them as cloistered, or living in a cloister. The Shakespearean "Nunnery" is more often referred to as a convent. If the convent is run by an Abbess (a particular rank of the sisterhood) it can be referred to as an Abbey.
The Eyrie Vineyards was created in 1966.
An eagle nest is callend an 'EYRIE'.