Quarry in a sentence as a noun

HN is a scouting network, not a quarry.

I agree, and he got his ore from the Ceramic store, no pick and hammer breaking down rocks from the quarry.

The heaviest specimen known so far was caught in an abandoned stone quarry, in Germany, in 1983.

It consists mostly of warehouses, industry and a rock quarry.

I know it's marketing, but still:"We used limestone from a local quarry to restore it and modernize it.

What if they catch a glint of dying firelight and divulge the Granok's location to hypothetical quarry?

Quarry in a sentence as a verb

Besides, it's totally reasonable to think that the stones were rough-hewn at the quarry, then refined at the construction site.

It implies the sentiment that these people are simply a quarry being hunted as a prize rather people, of their own free will, deciding that the grass is greener elsewhere.

For instance, I can call a noise complaint on my neighbor any time of the day for making too much noise, but I can't call a noise complaint on a quarry operating from 7am to 7pm.

I said "crushing mountain" mostly for shock value, only because when I was 17 and applying for college I really didn't grasp the burden of "future me" having to wheelbarrow $700+ a month away from the School-Loans quarry for 7+ years.

Microsoft was pathologically hostile to any competition, and it's obvious that this hostility was frequently tuned and recalibrated according to the success of the quarry.

He built up his hill of customers and you're slagging him because he didn't strip-mine the local quarry to build it into a skyscraper/mountain?I'd say it's equally likely that 37Signals could have failed utterly in rapid expansion as they could have succeeded if they made their moon-shot.

Quarry definitions

noun

a person who is the aim of an attack (especially a victim of ridicule or exploitation) by some hostile person or influence; "he fell prey to muggers"; "everyone was fair game"; "the target of a manhunt"

See also: prey target

noun

a surface excavation for extracting stone or slate; "a British term for `quarry' is `stone pit'"

noun

animal hunted or caught for food

See also: prey

verb

extract (something such as stones) from or as if from a quarry; "quarry marble"