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Looking for synonyms for "barn"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(n)
(agriculture) A storage facility for grain or sometimes animal feed.
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(British) A farm, with its associated buildings; a farmhouse, particularly one associated with a monastic order, or manor.
(countable) A place where agricultural and similar activities take place, especially the growing of crops or the raising of livestock.
(agriculture) A region which has favourable conditions to produce a large quantity of grain or, by extension, other food products; a food bowl.
A small, usually uncultivated area adjoining or (now especially) within the precincts of a house or other building.
(countable) A compartment for a single animal in a stable or cattle shed.
A building, wing or dependency set apart and adapted for lodging and feeding (and training) ungulates, especially horses.
(reservoirs) An artificial pool of water ahead of a larger body of water.
(colloquial) A dirty or very untidy place.
(plural swine) A pig (the animal).
A domestic animal, Equus asinus asinus, similar to a horse.
The passenger area of an airplane.
A small, simple one-storey dwelling or shelter, often with just one room, and generally built of readily available local materials.
A crude, roughly built hut or cabin.
An attic or similar space (often used for storage) in the roof of a house or other building.
Any distinctive identifying uniform worn by a group, such as the uniform worn by chauffeurs and male servants.
Any animal belonging to the Suidae family of mammals, especially the pig, the warthog, and the boar.
A building at the edge of a river, lake or other body of water in which boats are kept.
An act of folding.
A large garage-like structure where aircraft are kept.
The back or hindmost part; that which is behind, or last in order.
A basket, pen or enclosure for birds or small animals.
(broadly) A person who has not yet reached adulthood, whether natural (puberty), cultural (initiation), or legal (majority).
The act or time of shutting; close.
Synonym of hencoop.
The rear of the body, especially the part between the neck and the end of the spine and opposite the chest and belly.
(UK, business) A business partnership; the name under which it trades.
A surname.
An element on a kitchen stove that generates localized heat for cooking.
The upper storey of a barn used for storing hay.
(chiefly British) A barn, especially one used for keeping cattle in.
A shed for keeping cows.
A farm, including its buildings.
A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions.
A building, such as a barn, shed, or garage, that is separate from, but associated with some main building.
(agriculture) A vertical building, usually cylindrical, used for the production of silage.
(US) A baby’s bed with high, often slatted, often moveable sides, suitable for a child who has outgrown a cradle or bassinet.
(Texas) toolshed
A farm building operating as a dairy.
A diminutive of the male given names Barney or Barnett.
A building for exhibiting cattle and other domestic animals, as at a county fairgrounds.
A barn for cows.
(agriculture) The yard associated with or surrounding a barn.
A house (barn or shed) for keeping cows.
A cattle-fort; a building used to shelter cattle.
A barn for horses.
A small barn in which cattle are kept; a byre, a cowshed.
An animal (such as a horse) that lives in the same barn.
The amount that can fit in a barn
(UK) A type of barn for storing hay
A barn used in the Middle Ages for storing the tithes gathered from the local community
(UK, obsolete, dialect) A place of shelter for cattle.
(Scotland) A stock farm; a cattle farm.
Something from which other things extend; a foundation.
An animal, especially a large or dangerous land vertebrate.
A compartment in which cows are housed and kept.
Alternative form of barn door. [The large door of a barn.]
A stall; a fold for cattle.
(informal) An animal stereotypically found on a farm; livestock.
An enclosure for cows close by the farm buildings.
An enclosure for livestock, especially a circular one.
(dialect) A stall for an animal (usually a cow).
A farm whose agricultural land and buildings are in active use for crop production and/or the raising of livestock.
(now historical) A place where rubbish, dung, etc., are laid or deposited.
(British spelling) A large room (in a barn) designed for the mechanical milking of cows.
Synonym of milking parlour.
An individual domesticated bovine animal; a singular form of the generalised plural cattle.
(obsolete) A place where cows or cattle are kept; a dairy farm.
(obsolete, Ireland) A company of Irish herdsmen, or a single herdsman, wandering from place to place with flocks and herds, and living on their milk.
A large plot of land used for raising cattle, sheep or other livestock.
(colloquial) A sexually attractive, promiscuous male.
Alternative form of cow stall. [A compartment in which cows are housed and kept.]
(agriculture) A yard where cattle are given food.
(agriculture) A vehicle used in farms e.g. for pulling farm equipment and preparing the fields.
Dancing of a barn dance or barn dances.
An enclosure for sheep or cattle.
A place where dairy farming takes place.
An establishment for selective breeding of livestock, especially horses.
A store or supply.
(mainly North American) A building (or portion thereof) where items may be purchased.
Domesticated animal of the species Bos taurus (cows, bulls, steers, oxen etc), and other hoofed mammals of the genus Bos.
A number of domestic animals assembled together under the watch or ownership of a keeper.
A stopping place.
Alternative form of stud farm. [An establishment for selective breeding of livestock, especially horses.]
The act of spreading.
A public slaughterhouse for cattle, sheep, etc.
(adj)
(literally and figuratively) Beast-like.
A boat for transporting horses and cattle.
An egg produced by a hen allowed to roam within a barn.
A car, often a train car or semi-trailer, used to transport cattle.
(British, dialectal, archaic) A beast of burden; chiefly a workhorse, but also a working ox or other animal.
(rail transport, UK, dated) A pen on a platform in a railway goods yard for cattle travelling by rail.