How to Use cannery in a Sentence

cannery

noun
  • The Chiao brothers learned of cannery work the hard way.
    Carl Nolte, San Francisco Chronicle, 20 Mar. 2021
  • When Muir last sailed through in 1899, this spot held a salmon cannery and a few shacks.
    Anchorage Daily News, 26 May 2018
  • The source of any fraud would’ve likely happened at the cannery.
    cleveland, 23 June 2021
  • Many of the farmers had come to San Pedro in the 1960s to work the tuna fleets, docks and canneries.
    Joe Mozingo, latimes.com, 4 June 2018
  • The tide rises underneath the cannery, lifting the purse seine boats tied to the pier.
    Anjuli Grantham, Alaska Dispatch News, 9 Sep. 2017
  • The women at our house worked in the cannery and, afterward, at home.
    Kirmen Uribe, The New Yorker, 16 Nov. 2020
  • The cannery docks were devoid of life in the afternoon heat.
    John Schandelmeier, Anchorage Daily News, 13 June 2020
  • Chicken of the Sea built a cannery near the harbor, closing it in the early 2000s because the catch was too small.
    Vera Castaneda, Los Angeles Times, 18 Oct. 2019
  • The first cannery came to Homer in 1939, meaning there were boats fishing for salmon before that, Mitchell said.
    Elizabeth Earl, Anchorage Daily News, 26 Sep. 2019
  • San Diego was once called the tuna capital of the world, but by the 1960s the fleet had shrunk and some tuna canneries closed.
    sandiegouniontribune.com, 11 Jan. 2018
  • So, some women were able to get work in vegetable canneries, or even some of the work came into the camps.
    Lisa Deaderick, San Diego Union-Tribune, 19 Mar. 2023
  • Commercial fishing here began with the opening of the first cannery in the 1880s.
    Miranda Weiss, The Atlantic, 6 Oct. 2021
  • Save your burlap for transporting potatoes and leave the mason jars at the cannery.
    Madeleine Luckel, Vogue, 21 Dec. 2017
  • At one point, a group dressed in a cannery’s worth of fishnets goes to what looks like the Temple of Dendur room at the Met to dance in a fountain.
    Jenny Singer, Glamour, 9 Aug. 2020
  • The land was fertile and well-tended, the waters held plenty of fish, and a lobster cannery opened in 1860 to process the glut of crustaceans.
    Sara B. Franklin, Travel + Leisure, 7 Aug. 2020
  • Of course, that opens up a whole cannery of cans of worms, ethical and emotional.
    Tribune News Service, cleveland, 17 Dec. 2021
  • There are a few locals still scratching out some pounds, but the out-of-towners and the cannery workers are mostly gone.
    John Schandelmeier, Anchorage Daily News, 31 July 2021
  • The women staffed the cannery, which never slept, producing 30 tons of product a day.
    Henry Wismayer, Washington Post, 29 Aug. 2022
  • Carlos landed in Kodiak in 1983 and got a start working in the cannery.
    Michelle Theriault Boots, Anchorage Daily News, 2 May 2018
  • Both are accessed via ferry from Rockland, a onetime cannery town that’s now a food and art hot spot.
    Will Grunewald, Outside Online, 18 June 2020
  • At one point in the late 1800s, six turtle canneries operated along the Texas coast.
    Shannon Tompkins, Houston Chronicle, 13 Jan. 2018
  • His father worked in a cannery, among other jobs, and for a year the family lived in a nearby railroad boxcar.
    New York Times, 2 Dec. 2020
  • Arthur was a horse trader, and while attending school, Smith worked with him — and in canneries and on farms — throughout her childhood.
    Jillian Steinhauer, New York Times, 20 Apr. 2023
  • My son is one of the managers of a restaurant in what was once a cannery; a section of the floor is made of glass bricks so that customers can watch the sea lions lolling on the pilings below.
    Sallie Tisdale, Harper's magazine, 10 June 2019
  • Packed with locals, the decor is industrial, a reflection of the eatery’s former life as a cannery.
    Peter Cheng, Los Angeles Magazine, 23 Apr. 2018
  • But the first cannery on the river opened in 1866, and many more followed, fed by diabolical fish wheels that scooped millions of pounds of fish a year from the water.
    Sallie Tisdale, Harper's magazine, 10 June 2019
  • In another instance, a setnetter was caught on the cannery dock between stacks of fish totes.
    John Schandelmeier, Anchorage Daily News, 20 Aug. 2019
  • More than 40 years later, a third-hand account claimed the stranger was no more than a stowaway with area cannery experience.
    David Reamer, Anchorage Daily News, 15 May 2022
  • Once a center of fur trading and canneries, Astoria’s historic homes still stand, and the town almost seems lost in time.
    Patricia Doherty, Travel + Leisure, 27 Mar. 2023
  • When Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas was a boy in the 1980s, his grandmother would walk him and his brother to the store for ice cream before heading to her night shift at a local cannery.
    David Lauter, Los Angeles Times, 8 Sep. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'cannery.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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