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View synonyms for barn

barn

1

[ bahrn ]

noun

  1. a building for storing hay, grain, etc., and often for housing livestock.
  2. a very large garage for buses, trucks, etc.; carbarn.


verb (used with object)

  1. to store (hay, grain, etc.) in a barn.

barn

2

[ bahrn ]

noun

, Physics.
  1. a unit of nuclear cross section, equal to 10 −24 square centimeter. : b

barn

1

/ bɑːn /

noun

  1. a unit of nuclear cross section equal to 10 28square metre b


barn

2

/ bɑːn /

noun

  1. a large farm outbuilding, used chiefly for storing hay, grain, etc, but also for housing livestock
  2. a large shed for sheltering railroad cars, trucks, etc
  3. any large building, esp an unattractive one
  4. modifier relating to a system of poultry farming in which birds are allowed to move freely within a barn

    barn eggs

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Other Words From

  • barnlike adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of barn1

before 950; Middle English bern, Old English berern ( bere ( barley 1 ) + ern, ǣrn house, cognate with Old Frisian fīaern cowhouse, Old High German erin, Gothic razn, Old Norse rann house; ransack, rest 1 )

Origin of barn2

First recorded in 1945–50; special use of barn 1

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Word History and Origins

Origin of barn1

C20: from barn 1; so called because of the relatively large cross section

Origin of barn2

Old English beren , from bere barley + ærn room; see barley 1

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Example Sentences

So it was me, the taxi driver, and a man with a broken arm moving all these priceless cars out of the barn.

From Fortune

A great option for a rustic, farmhouse transitional style media stand, this unit comes in several colorways and includes sliding barn style doors, two side doors with metal mesh, and a distressed pine finish.

Right now, the barn is relatively simple and open with an astroturf floor, but as the season progresses, Roginson plans to add propane heaters and three vinyl walls on the north, south, and west sides of the structure to insulate from the cold.

From Eater

Several of these measures are sound ideas, but unfortunately, two of its latest efforts once again amount to waiting until the horse has made it halfway around the world before you shut the barn door.

The store, the barn, and the other structures were consumed by the fire Monday night.

He was born in a barn to penniless parents who were part of a people under occupation.

From the roof of the barn is a long loop of rope, through this the turkey is suspended by its legs.

There is an ancestral homestead, but it has a meth lab in the barn.

I read that you recorded it at a converted barn in Devon, UK.

Also happy to get some fresh air (and a huge, aromatic cigar at a safe distance from the barn).

He went blindly down the street, turned at the corner and sought a quiet place, a livery barn.

Then, kindly and gently, the boy took Squinty over to the place where the corn crib was built on to the barn.

She knew there would be plenty of rope in the Norwood barn or the garage for their need in erecting the aerials.

If we go against 'em now, it'll be all same goin' blindfolded into a barn t' pick out the best hoss.

A man driving a number of cattle to Boston, one of his cows went into a barn-yard, where there stood a young lad.

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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barmyBarnabas