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stockyard
[stok-yahrd]
noun
an enclosure with pens, sheds, etc., connected with a slaughterhouse, railroad, market, etc., for the temporary housing of cattle, sheep, swine, or horses.
a yard for livestock.
stockyard
/ ˈstɒkˌjɑːd /
noun
a large yard with pens or covered buildings where farm animals are assembled, sold, etc
Word History and Origins
Origin of stockyard1
Example Sentences
RSF fighters managed to capture a cattle market, a prison and a military base while broadcasting videos of themselves walking around empty stockyards.
Because they often are sold online at auction houses or to stockyards, it can be almost impossible to determine where the beef eventually ends up.
Old stockyards and abandoned red-brick storehouses are gradually filling with hipster bars and coffee shops, galleries and artisanal-everything shops.
The stockyards are gone, but the restaurant stayed.
Farm Sanctuary began not as a home for rescued animals but with a group of young activists working to expose animal cruelty at farms, stockyards and slaughterhouses.
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