How to Use storehouse in a Sentence

storehouse

noun
  • For in my storehouse on this day Are piles of good things hid away.
    Leah Hall, Country Living, 17 Oct. 2022
  • Last year, its storehouse, a massive space filled with grains and rice, was ransacked.
    Matt Rivers, ABC News, 31 July 2023
  • The storehouse fires were a one-off scene as the button to Episode 5.
    Sarah Shachat, IndieWire, 26 Aug. 2025
  • Build a storehouse of knowledge that can respond to challenges aired.
    Simone E. Morris, Forbes, 30 Oct. 2021
  • Rather, we are shown the storehouse of experiences that shaped him.
    Alex Ross, The New Yorker, 8 Feb. 2021
  • The great cities are heirs to those places where reserves of food were kept for the first time in tall jars in storehouses.
    New York Times, 28 Apr. 2020
  • But the deepest and most mysterious storehouse of all might be our minds.
    Dennis Overbye, New York Times, 19 Sep. 2016
  • What public purpose is advanced by these storehouses of wealth?
    Stephen Moore, Boston Herald, 12 Mar. 2025
  • Marrow also acts as a storehouse for fats, which are released when the body needs energy.
    Jason Bittel, Washington Post, 20 Oct. 2019
  • During the massacre, a rumor spread among the white mob that the church was a storehouse of weapons for Black resisters.
    Paul Gardullo, Smithsonian Magazine, 24 May 2021
  • By one estimate, as many as two million fur coats moldered away in storehouses and were available to any taker.
    Jennifer Le Zotte, Smithsonian, 8 Feb. 2017
  • Russia, of course, controls vast swaths of land, a storehouse of oil and gas and a nuclear arsenal.
    Patricia Cohen, New York Times, 24 Feb. 2025
  • The pumphouse campus once had a machine shop, storehouse, carriage house and stables and a brick-making kiln.
    Jacques Kelly, Baltimore Sun, 8 Feb. 2025
  • Men and beasts jostle in the dirty markets; ships bob and crash at the dock; the storehouses overflow with infinities of goods.
    Sam Anderson, New York Times, 26 Jan. 2018
  • Drndić reproduces these names as text, constructing within the novel its own storehouse of corpses.
    Merve Emre, The New York Review of Books, 6 June 2019
  • And their storehouse of young prospects will be attractive to other NHL teams.
    Steve Lyttle, charlotteobserver, 13 May 2018
  • Residents can always expect a storehouse of local knowledge from the two.
    Linda Gandee, cleveland, 15 June 2021
  • Luckily, the school's campus was built on a cattle range that included a barn that was being used as a storehouse.
    Ben Brazil, latimes.com, 5 Mar. 2018
  • Supplies from the bishops’ storehouse in Honolulu have been shipped to Maui.
    Scott D. Pierce, The Salt Lake Tribune, 21 Aug. 2023
  • And now Marie’s become some kind of storehouse of Vezda repellants.
    Keith Phipps, Vulture, 11 Sep. 2025
  • For Keoua’s raid on Kamehameha’s storehouses, Campeau and his team built them to just burn.
    Sarah Shachat, IndieWire, 26 Aug. 2025
  • The cure for the next threat must come from the storehouse of technology and ideas that only a community can support.
    Standish Fleming, Forbes, 29 June 2021
  • Black and red spray paint was used to graffiti the church sign and several sides of the church and storehouse, according to Brown.
    Mary Grace Keller, baltimoresun.com/maryland/carroll, 30 July 2019
  • Ours is the first study to use this vast storehouse of information to analyze changes over time in the charter and district sectors.
    M. Danish Shakeel, WSJ, 8 Sep. 2020
  • The storehouse makes much of its own food and distributes it to those in need, largely members of the faith but also several school districts.
    Courtney Tanner, The Salt Lake Tribune, 1 Jan. 2021
  • By the time the raid was over, the British had torched storehouses and barns, destroying thousands of barrels of beef, flour, wheat, oats and corn.
    Eli Wizevich, Smithsonian Magazine, 18 Feb. 2025
  • To park a car in a covered space, drivers had to rent a spot in a motor storehouse or use an existing barn or carriage house on their own property.
    oregonlive, 17 Oct. 2019
  • Worldwide, forests are a net storehouse, or sink, of carbon, removing one billion to two billion tons from the atmosphere each year.
    New York Times, 7 Mar. 2018
  • Nor is the museum a dusty storehouse of third-tier European old masters and Chinese teapots.
    Daniel Lee, WSJ, 12 Mar. 2021
  • The storehouse where the khipus were found was probably used to keep food needed to maintain the large number of troops deployed in the invasion.
    William Neuman, New York Times, 2 Jan. 2016

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'storehouse.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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