Brickyard
a place where bricks are made, stored, or sold.
Historical Examples
Gipsy Life George Smith
The Johnstown Horror James Herbert Walker
A Company of Tanks W. H. L. Watson
Full-Back Foster Ralph Henry Barbour
Twentieth Century Negro Literature Various
Appletons’ Popular Science Monthly, September 1899 Various
Cleg Kelly, Arab of the City S. R. (Samuel Rutherford) Crockett
A Blue Devil of France G. P. Capart
Literary New York Charles Hemstreet
Cleg Kelly, Arab of the City S. R. (Samuel Rutherford) Crockett
noun
a place in which bricks are made, stored, or sold
Read Also:
- Brickearth
noun a clayey alluvium suitable for the making of bricks: specifically, such a deposit in southern England, yielding a fertile soil
- Bricker
a block of clay hardened by drying in the sun or burning in a kiln, and used for building, paving, etc.: traditionally, in the U.S., a rectangle 2.25 × 3.75 × 8 inches (5.7 × 9.5 × 20.3 cm), red, brown, or yellow in color. such blocks collectively. the material of which such blocks are […]
- Bricker-operation
bricker operation
- Brickhouse
brickhouse
- Brickie
noun (Brit, informal) a bricklayer