novice, nun
Probably not. As a nun they couldn't have a sexual relationship with a husband because when they take vows they are to remain celibate. Anyone I have known who was a nun or priest and wanted to get married had to leave .
That depends on the order. A nun is usually a woman who has take solemn vows in a monastery. The senior nun would be the Abbess, and would be called, depending on the country: Reverend Mother or Lady Abbess in formal address (for instance, in a letter: Reverend Mother Scholastica, O.S.B.). In addressing her, one would simply call her Mother, or My Lady (again, depending on the country).
Yes, non-virgins can become nuns. However, once a nun they must remain celibate.
novice
If you're referring to the "Nora the Nun" from Wepre Park.. Not really, but obviously her spirit still may remain at the waterfall in Wepre Park.
Literally, a small samana; a novice monk (nun) who observes ten precepts and who is a candidate for admission to the order of bhikkhus (bhikkhunis). See pabbajja.
Yes, it is still possible to become a nun in 2011. Many religious orders and communities accept new members each year. Interested individuals can reach out to specific orders or consult with their local religious organizations for more information on the process of becoming a nun.
"nun" is a palindrome that means 'a religious woman'.
Novice horse means that the horse has gone novice and the rider hasn't, and novice rider means that only the rider has gone novice, not the horse.
A boy nun would typically wear a traditional nun's habit, which consists of a long robe, a tunic, a hood, and a scapular. However, since nuns are traditionally women, the concept of a boy nun is not commonly seen in religious contexts.
To become a nun, peasant woman would go to a convent and say she wanted to be one. This did not automatically make her a nun, however. She would be examined to see that she really had a calling to be a nun, and this took quite a while, perhaps years, and happened in stages. After being a novice, she would take her vows and become a nun. If a woman was not able to be a nun, which could be determined at any part of the process of become a nun, that did not automatically mean she had to leave the convent. Many women who were not nuns lived in convents. Some were educated there, some retired there, some escaped from abusive husbands there, and more than one stayed in a convent to escape the arm of the law.