Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A large farm building used for storing farm products and sheltering livestock.
- noun A large shed for the housing of vehicles, such as railroad cars.
- noun A particularly large, typically bare building.
- noun Physics A unit of area equal to 10−24 square centimeters, used to measure cross sections in nuclear physics.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To store up in a barn.
- noun A child.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- transitive verb obsolete To lay up in a barn.
- noun A covered building used chiefly for storing grain, hay, and other productions of a farm. In the United States a part of the barn is often used for stables.
- noun (Zoöl.) an owl of Europe and America (
Aluco flammeus , orStrix flammea ), which frequents barns and other buildings. - noun (Zoöl.) the common American swallow (
Hirundo horreorum ), which attaches its nest of mud to the beams and rafters of barns. - noun obsolete A child. See
bairn .
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun dialect, parts of Northern England A
child . - noun agriculture A
building , often found on afarm , used for storage or keeping animals such ascattle . - noun nuclear physics A
unit ofsurface area equal to 10-28square metres . - noun informal, Canada, ice hockey An
arena .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun an outlying farm building for storing grain or animal feed and housing farm animals
- noun (physics) a unit of nuclear cross section; the effective circular area that one particle presents to another as a target for an encounter
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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*pondurs combynin teh dairee barn an teh nawtee barn*
EENY, MEENY, - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger? 2010
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If you've lived in the West very long, you may be familiar with the term barn dance, but I'll bet you've never heard of this one - a riding demonstration, art show and sale, silent auction, live entertainment and a dinner / dance held in an indoor arena, all during the same evening.
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And the work inside the barn is about bending the limitations of wood.
How to put on an f---ing Mamet play in nineteen f---ing days 2009
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And the work inside the barn is about bending the limitations of wood.
Lance Mannion: 2009
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The idea of a poor family denied any kind of welfare and having to give birth in a barn is appealing to a bleeding-heart lefty like me.
Archive 2008-12-01 lili 2008
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The idea of a poor family denied any kind of welfare and having to give birth in a barn is appealing to a bleeding-heart lefty like me.
Scrooges Beware lili 2008
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They are piled floor-to-ceiling in storage rooms, and fill up what he calls a "barn," though the structure was erected not for livestock and hay bales but for broken pinball games.
Wired Top Stories Matthew Shechmeister 2011
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And I believe it's going to be what you call a barn-burner.
unknown title 2009
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The separate 15,000-square-foo t "sports barn" is a faithful reproduction of Assembly Hall, the basketball arena at Indiana University where the Hoosiers play.
Forrest Lucas Wins Conseco Mansion Erik Holm 2010
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Across the farmyard from his family's kitchen, inside an old barn, is the tiny workshop where James Swift and his two butchers are turning the finest free-range, rare breed Welsh pigs into the finest free-range, rare-breed charcuterie: sausages, salamis, saucisson, prosciutto, chorizo … the list goes on.
Best UK Food Producer 2010: Trealy Farm, Monmouthshire Carole Cadwalladr 2010
reesetee commented on the word barn
A unit of area for measuring the reaction cross-section (generally different from the geometric cross-section) of atomic nuclei and subatomic particles in the study of their interactions with other nuclei or particles. A barn is equal to 10 to 24 square cm. The name, coined by U.S. scientists, is derived from the phrase "side of a barn"--something easy to hit.
November 7, 2007