hangard[< Cdn F hangar(d) F hangar]Hist.DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
THIS ENTRY MAY CONTAIN OUTDATED INFORMATION, TERMS and EXAMPLES
1n.
a shed, warehouse, or outbuilding.
1777  Every person shall clean the street before his house, outhouse, hangard or emplacement every Saturday, under penalty of five shillings.
1806  (809)  Those next the river have attached to them very extensive warehouses (called, in the language of Quebec, hangards), and vessels come close to the wharfs to discharge their cargoes.
1808  The next morning at 6 o'clock, a large Hangard of 140 feet in length by 40 in depth, belonging to Mr. Alex. Munn, ship builder, was crushed to pieces by an enormous mass of snow which fell from the Cape near the same place.
1940  Inside the palisade were . . . a trading store, two "hangards" or stables. . . .
2n.
an outbuilding serving as an ice-house (def. 1) at a fur post.