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Crossword clues for cellarage

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cellarage

Cellarage \Cel"lar*age\, n.

  1. The space or storerooms of a cellar; a cellar.
    --Sir W. Scott.

    You hear this fellow in the cellarage.
    --Shak.

  2. Chare for storage in a cellar.

Wiktionary
cellarage

n. The space or storerooms of a cellar.

WordNet
cellarage
  1. n. a charge for storing goods in a cellar

  2. a storage area in a cellar

Usage examples of "cellarage".

The three moved into the vast cellarage of the fortress, where shelves of ancient and unusable supplies loomed all about them.

The wind had dropped and the night air was tainted somewhat with the smell of the burning street lamps, but it was still cool and luxurious after the dank staleness that had pervaded the cellarage and which still clung to his clothes.

Under the ring, in the cellarage, was housed the menagerie which the imperial beasts had temporarily vacated in favour of those of Colonel Kearney.

They were all creaking floorboards in the cellarage of the brain, inheritances from our eo-human days.

Front door in one street, back door in another and cellarage with flaps opening on a court between.

A couple of brawny supers carried Mama on stage in Act Four, wrapped in a shroud, tipped her into the cellarage amidst displays of grief from all concerned but up she would pop at curtain-call having shaken the dust off her graveclothes and touched up her eye make-up, to curtsy with the rest of the resurrected immortals, all of whom, even Prince Hamlet himself, turned out, in the end, to be just as un-dead as she.

A couple of brawny supers carried Mama on stage in Act Four, wrapped in a shroud, tipped her into the cellarage amidst displays of grief from all concerned but up she would pop at curtain-call having shaken the dust off her graveclothes and touched up her eye make-up, to curtsy with the rest of the resurrected immortals, all of whom, even Prince Hamlet himself, turned out, in the end, to be just as un-dead as she.

IV--LARGO E MESTO Out of the poisonous East, Over a continent of blight, Like a maleficent Influence released From the most squalid cellarage of hell, The Wind-Fiend, the abominable - The Hangman Wind that tortures temper and light - Comes slouching, sullen and obscene, Hard on the skirts of the embittered night.

Vholes's jet-black door, in an angle profoundly dark on the brightest midsummer morning and encumbered by a black bulk-head of cellarage staircase against which belated civilians generally strike their brows.