storehouse
See also: store-house
English
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editNoun
editstorehouse (plural storehouses)
- A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions.
- Synonyms: magazine, repository, warehouse
- 1981, William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light: Mythology, Sexuality and the Origins of Culture, London: Rider/Hutchinson & Co., page 175:
- Jacobsen's theory about the empty storehouse is still valid, for a myth never has one meaning only; a myth is a polyphonic fugue of many voices.
- (figurative, by extension) A single location or resource where a large quantity of something can be found.
- This old book is a genuine storehouse of useful cooking tips.
- 1988 April 14, Richard Fifield, “Frozen assets of the ice cores”, in New Scientist, number 1608, page 28:
- To most people, the huge ice sheets of Antarctica and Greenland are merely water that once was snow. To glaciologists and climatologists, they are storehouses of the Earth's former atmospheres.
- (obsolete) A mass or quantity laid up.
- 1591, Ed[mund] Sp[enser], Complaints. Containing Sundrie Small Poemes of the Worlds Vanitie. […], London: […] William Ponsonbie, […], →OCLC:
- enrich the storehouse of his powerfull wit
Hypernyms
editTranslations
editbuilding for keeping goods of any kind
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Verb
editstorehouse (third-person singular simple present storehouses, present participle storehousing, simple past and past participle storehoused)
- (transitive) To lay up in store.
- the mental storehousing of information
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