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larder

[ US /ˈɫɑɹdɝ/ ]
[ UK /lˈɑːdɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a small storeroom for storing foods or wines
  2. a supply of food especially for a household

How To Use larder In A Sentence

  • In the past, noble lords and rich men - when they could get a licence from the Crown - built themselves a living larder in the shape of a deer park with high fences and walls.
  • Borates are the most effective treatment for many crawling insects including, roaches, silverfish, larder beetles, carpenter ants, and other woodborers, as well as wood decay organisms.
  • But most of all, they want a larder, stocked with jellies and jams, pickles and preserves.
  • But the fact remains: Corn is an inherent ingredient in our traditional larder.
  • In a blaze of dazzling light and gayety, White City, the new pleasure resort on the South side, which was given over to the public today, opened its doors last night and showed some few thousands of its friends the completeness of its larder of entertainment and innocent, as well as interesting, diversion.
  • In real terms, compared to the cost of other foods, the larder is the bargain basement. Food Watch
  • There's good food in the larder, and in the fridge, and we have a movie to watch if we get bored.
  • She recalled that when the larder was empty the family knelt in prayer. Times, Sunday Times
  • So, a couple of hours and $200 later, the larder is well stocked once again. And So This Is Christmas
  • And to honey badgers, cobras and large-eyed tree snakes called boomslangs, the nest is a dependable larder.
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