Granary in a sentence as a noun

You can have a granary with several years' worth of seed.

You figure out how to fend off the co-op members when we try to break into their granary.

It's the equivalent of letting rats into a granary.

One of the side effects was that people found that the sliced white was sold out and there was only this weird "granary" wholemeal stuff left on the shelves.

The cultivation of wheat, and the ability to store it in a granary led to the establishment of the first cities in the Fertile Crescent.

Like misers counting grains on the granary floor while outside the new crop is falling from the stalks for want of harvesting, we sit in the middle of great riches and behave as though we were destitute.

Bengal was India's wealthiest province, for her granary, rich in muslin, silk yarn, and salt petre, products which European trading companies were particularly interested in.

The roads and the granary systems were scaled-up urban technologies that helped the empire to function, but I'm not aware of any innovations at the empire level which didn't have some kind of urban precedent.

Our ability to organize and plan is what alleviated it - and we were thorough since granary-like enterprises can be found in the ruins of every previous human civilization that has ever existed.

Granary definitions

noun

a storehouse for threshed grain or animal feed

See also: garner