storehouse

IPA: stˈɔrhaʊs

noun

  • A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions.
  • (figurative, by extension) A single location or resource where a large quantity of something can be found.
  • (obsolete) A mass or quantity laid up.

verb

  • (transitive) To lay up in store.
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Examples of "storehouse" in Sentences

  • Those are rooms known as the storehouse, in one of which dear old
  • On the first floor of the storehouse was the journeymen's workroom.
  • Intermediate long-term storehouse Connectors for storehouse filling.
  • He has laid up the supply of all our need in the storehouse, which is
  • The glories of London, which he calls the storehouse and mart of all Europe, and the excellence of
  • A storehouse was the first building put up by the commission, at a cost of $4,200; then a carpenter shop at a cost of $3,800.
  • In the storehouse is a box of explosives Telders recovered from the old Norwegian research hut while his team was assembling the Array.
  • And you can’t really ‘protein up’ the way you can carb up because there is really no short term storehouse for protein other than glycogen.
  • -- A fortnight later candles are wholly wanting in certain quarters, except in the section storehouse, which is almost empty, each person being allowed only one.
  • To return to the farm: the storehouse was a long red half-timbered building, where the hides were hung on rails to dry, their corners pegged out with wooden sticks.

Related Links

synonyms for storehousedescribing words for storehouse
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