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Noun
The company's first location opened in 1976 under the Price Club name in a converted airplane hangar on Morena Boulevard in San Diego.—Jenna Prestininzi, Detroit Free Press, 19 Dec. 2024 That means space, and lots of it, including two helicopter pads (one of which has a hangar with an H175 helicopter always on standby) and an 82-foot swimming pool that can hold 6,357 cubic feet of water.—Julia Zaltzman, Robb Report, 12 Dec. 2024
Verb
Leslie Day, a friend who hangared her plane near Ms. Bera’s at Gillespie Field in El Cajon, Calif., outside San Diego, estimated in an interview that Ms. Bera had spent the equivalent of more than three years in the pilot’s seat.—Daniel E. Slotnik, BostonGlobe.com, 12 Apr. 2018 The issue of high fuel prices came to the board’s attention in late spring when airport tenants – which range from flight schools, to charter aircraft, to hangar renters – began to complain to board members.—Jordan Graham, Orange County Register, 25 Jan. 2017 See all Example Sentences for hangar
Word History
Etymology
Noun
borrowed from French, "shed open on one or more sides for storing agricultural products, farm implements, and vehicles," going back to Middle French, perhaps going back to Old Low Franconian *haimgarda- "enclosure around a building," going back to West Germanic *haima- "dwelling" + *garđa- "enclosure" — more at home entry 1, yard entry 1
Note:
The French form occurs earliest as a place name, Hangart (1135), in Somme department. Though the persistent attestation of the word with initial h-, diachronically and in dialects, is a certain indication of Germanic origin, the fact that such a compound is apparently not attested as a generic word or place-name in a Germanic language renders the etymology speculative.
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