1. storehouse - Noun
2. storehouse - Verb
A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions; a magazine; a repository; a warehouse.
A mass or quality laid up.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAlong with those rooms, the friendly, occasionally formidable, but always bespectacled person who was a storehouse of information on anything from Kafka to Kant is likely to be relegated to the pages of a dictionary. Source: Internet
Black Rose Books. 1980. p. 369 This contrasts with anarcho-communism where wages would be abolished, and where individuals would take freely from a storehouse of goods "to each according to his need." Source: Internet
After eating, Falconer said the boys went by the old family-owned slaughterhouse that was used as a storehouse to play. Source: Internet
By 1819 the Harmonites had built 150 log homes, a church, a community storehouse, barns, stables, and a tavern, along with thriving shops and mills, and cleared land for farming. Source: Internet
Home to the Order after leaving their homeworld Tython in the Deep Core, the Great Library of Ossus became a symbol of the Jedi and the greatest storehouse of knowledge in the galaxy. Source: Internet
The mosque -- located in the Roman Agora on the outskirts of the city's Acropolis within the archaeological area -- is believed to be built during the reign of Ottoman Sultan Mehmet II and it was used as a storehouse for historical artifacts until 2010. Source: Internet