What's the difference between repository and storehouse?

Repository


Definition:

  • (n.) A place where things are or may be reposited, or laid up, for safety or preservation; a depository.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Two patients who developed marked intraocular pressure elevations after repository corticosteroid injection did not manifest a positive response on subsequent topical corticosteroid testing.
  • (2) Three important elements of the pesticide quality assurance program in the Health Protection Branch of Canada are described--the sampling protocol, the repository of pesticide standards, and the check sample program of the Federal Interdepartmental Committee on Pesticides.
  • (3) These data are in agreement with the predictions derived from a mechanism of phosphorylation by which [gamma-32P]GTP does not act as a phosphoryl donor for the protein kinase activity but, instead, only as a repository of high group transfer potential phosphoryl groups used to make [gamma-32P]ATP, from contaminating ADP, by means of the nucleoside diphosphate kinase activity.
  • (4) The model has been used to evaluate certain assumptions underlying the environmental standard for high-level waste repositories recently issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
  • (5) In the glycerol model of this syndrome, we demonstrate that the kidney responds to such inordinate amounts of heme proteins by inducing the heme-degradative enzyme, heme oxygenase, as well as increasing the synthesis of ferritin, the major cellular repository for iron.
  • (6) It is a finely-tuned sequence of level changes and alluring glimpses, more familiar to the world of shopping malls and airport terminals than a repository of knowledge.
  • (7) Stored plasma from 3 Victorian dairy herds with a history of JD, sera from specimens submitted from animals showing clinical signs of JD and sera from the US National Repository for Paratuberculosis Specimens were used to determine the sensitivity of each test.
  • (8) However, one must consider the attitudes that prevailed at the time, the high rate of fetal and infant mortality, and the blossoming role of museums as repositories of knowledge.
  • (9) This paper discusses the value of an International Repository of Chromosomal Abnormalities and Variants as a means of communication and case finding.
  • (10) Dawn Powell: A Time to Be Born (1942) Joseph Heller: Catch-22 (1961) Kurt Vonnegut: Breakfast of Champions (1973) David Foster Wallace: Infinite Jest (1996) The American comedy, generally speaking, is a scatological thing, or a repository of racial prejudice or gender stereotypes.
  • (11) The U.S. Department of Energy has selected three sites, from five nominated, to characterize for a nuclear repository to permanently dispose of nuclear waste.
  • (12) The mast cell must also be considered since it is the repository for mediators which cause increased vascular permeability and has the potential for eliciting, and possibly sustaining, some of the white cell mediated events associated with the inflammatory process.
  • (13) An example of applying this monitoring technique at a radwaste repository is given.
  • (14) The National Neurological Research Bank (Los Angeles), the Brain Tissue Bank (Belmont, Mass), and the Department of Neuropathology at Johns Hopkins Hospital (Baltimore) have agreed to serve as repositories for tissues.
  • (15) Professor Gordon MacKerron, an energy expert at Sussex University and a former chairman of the CoRWM, said building two repositories could have major political advantages because the government could face opposition from local communities to hosting an unlimited amount of waste from new power stations rather than a finite amount of legacy waste from existing sites.
  • (16) Unlike most previous sites censored by the state, Github is not just a news site or a social network: it is crucial to the working lives of a significant proportion of the programming community, as well as being a host for a number of important repositories required to make the internet work.
  • (17) These GCT granules probably are the repositories of nerve growth factor, which is particularly abundant in Praomys.
  • (18) This cramped, multi-storey shop is packed with them, like some great gaming repository.
  • (19) In this application of obtaining a diverse sample from the 230,000 compounds in the National Cancer Institute Repository, we cluster to select compounds that are different from the rest, to optimize screening for new leads.
  • (20) In addition, these healers were repositories of many potentially harmful beliefs, e.g., that having sex with a virgin will rid a man of AIDS.

Storehouse


Definition:

  • (n.) A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions; a magazine; a repository; a warehouse.
  • (n.) A mass or quality laid up.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Storehouse later sold BHS for £200m in 2000 to Green, and he quickly won plaudits for the speed with which he brought it back to profitability.
  • (2) The ongoing loss of the world's tropical rain forests threatens to destroy a vast storehouse of untested biological compounds.
  • (3) It floated on the stock market in the 1930s before merging with Mothercare and Habitat in 1986 to become Storehouse, which was led by Sir Terence Conran.
  • (4) When the molten surface of the earth solidified over 4 X 10(9) years ago the quantity of phosphorus to be contained in the storehouse of the new planet had already been resolved.
  • (5) The Xenopus oocyte nucleus (GV) is a storehouse for a large number of proteins that are used during early development.
  • (6) Those who turned up early outside the Guinness Storehouse visitor centre to see the royal couple only managed a distant glimpse of the car.
  • (7) When he was 15 King went on to Storehouse, a Negro college in Atlanta.
  • (8) The telephone companies have resisted having to store customer data for additional periods of time on behalf of the NSA, and any new third-party private storehouse of metadata would have to be created from scratch.
  • (9) Amid a drive to boost Russia’s cultural output and offer an alternative to the Hollywood films that dominate the country’s box office, the government said earlier this month it had approved a private-sector investment in Mosfilm that will include building two studios, a costume storehouse, a cinema and a concert hall.
  • (10) The toxins of different storehouse moulds were also examined.
  • (11) These extremely high concentrations were found only in the vicinity of storehouses where treated seed was kept.
  • (12) Whole-plant, high-fiber foods are complex storehouses of a diversity of polymers, including resistant starch, and of bioactive compounds.
  • (13) Back over on Smithfield Square, the Old Jameson whiskey distillery offers tastings and tours (from €14.40; I’ve never got round to trying it though), as does the hugely popular Guinness Storehouse across the river in the Liberties area (I have tried this: it’s fun).
  • (14) John Williams runs the Storehouse community centre and food bank on the Queensway estate in Southend.
  • (15) The Continental Congress established laboratories and storehouses to serve the needs of the army.
  • (16) But it was when he bought Bhs from Storehouse in 2000, and Arcadia two years later, that he gained real recognition.
  • (17) Also the group of storehouse- and court personnel as well as the drivers, being exposed only to a raiting sound level of approx.
  • (18) External environment of vegetable storehouses and catering establishements in the foci of far-eastern scarlatina-like in the Primorsk territory was found to be considerably contaminated with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis.
  • (19) A woman who was 41 y of age developed pulmonary edema after massive fungal inhalation at an orange storehouse.
  • (20) The patient, aged 23, was employed in a florist storehouse.

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