Storehouse in a sentence as a noun

There's a lot of value in being a central storehouse for a LOT of data, in my opinion.

Thus, the NSAs need for a 1-million-square-foot data storehouse.

[...] Bank notes, as an alternate storehouse of value, are a constraint on central banks’ power.

You don't have to be paranoid about Facebook's intent to realize that it's a huge storehouse of personal data.

Certainly not after reading this:>Bank notes, as an alternate storehouse of value, are a constraint on central banks’ power.

All you do is sit back and collect royalties - no need to manage storehouse monkeys, provide payment portals for hundreds of little retailers, so on and so forth.

So population can continue to grow unchecked without stressing resources?Where are you hiding your storehouse of infinite supply?

Civilization is a storehouse of knowledge that helps people figure out what the right thing to do is, but societies are incentive systems that usually encourage doing the wrong thing.

If you still have boxes of floppies sitting in your attic or basement or grandparents’ place or wherever else, I’m telling you the days of it being a semi- dependable storehouse are over.

Math at this high level should primarily expand your thinking, and secondarily your storehouse of previously proven rigorous statements.

> There's also a storehouse of reliable information on self improvement written by psychologists who done experiment and research things like willpower and discipline, why it fails, and so on.

Storehouse definitions

noun

a depository for goods; "storehouses were built close to the docks"

See also: depot entrepot storage store