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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
observatory
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
astronomical
▪ Triangulations on distant hills were attempted, weather records kept, and there was an astronomical observatory.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ the Griffith Observatory
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As you say, the place is now an observatory, and seemed quite ideal for my project.
▪ Filling in the log is an evening ritual at all bird observatories.
▪ I pressed the button to close the observatory roof and set to work setting up my lights.
▪ The accuracy of global field models depends on the worldwide network of magnetic observatories.
▪ The path was built to serve an observatory that functioned at the top of the Ben at the turn of the century.
▪ The priests guarded their secrets well by living highly secluded lives, usually in monasteries adjacent to their observatories.
▪ The shuttle also will nudge the observatory gently into a slighter higher orbit to extend its lifetime.
▪ Well-satisfied, and by now very hungry, I walked back to the observatory for breakfast.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Observatory

Observatory \Ob*serv"a*to*ry\, n.; pl. Observatories. [Cf. F. observatoire.]

  1. A place or building for making observations on the heavenly bodies.

    The new observatory in Greenwich Park.
    --Evelyn.

  2. A building fitted with instruments for making systematic observations of any particular class or series of natural phenomena.

  3. A place, as an elevated chamber, from which a view may be observed or commanded.

  4. (Mil.) A lookout on a flank of a battery whence an officer can note the range and effect of the fire; usually referred to as an observation post.
    --Farrow.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
observatory

"building for observing astronomical phenomena," 1670s (in reference to Greenwich), from French observatoire, from observer (v.); see observe.

Wiktionary
observatory

n. A place where stars, planets and other celestial body are observed, usually through a telescope.

WordNet
observatory
  1. n. a building designed and equipped to observe astronomical phenomena

  2. a structure commanding a wide view of its surroundings [syn: lookout, observation tower, lookout station]

Wikipedia
Observatory
Observatory (disambiguation)

An observatory is a location used for observing terrestrial or celestial events.

Observatory may also refer to:

  • Observatory, Bristol, a building in Clifton, Bristol, England
  • Observatory, Cape Town, suburb in Cape Town, South Africa
  • Observatory, Gauteng, suburb in Johannesburg, South Africa
  • Observatory (album), 2012 album by Steve Weingart & Renee Jones
  • Observatory (horse), thoroughbred race horse
  • The Observatory (journal), an astronomy journal
  • The Observatory (band), an art rock, experimental and electronica band based in Singapore
Observatory (horse)

Observatory is a thoroughbred race horse. He won the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes at Ascot, and the Prix d'Ispahan in France.

Observatory (album)

Observatory is the second studio album by husband and wife duo Steve Weingart & Renee Jones. Co-produced by Steve Weingart and Simon Phillips, the CD was released worldwide on November 27th, 2012 by Skeewa Music.

Usage examples of "observatory".

Sandi Thiaput at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, had made several measurements of the Martian albedo for another project the previous year and Sandi e-mailed the raw and post-processed data to him.

Killigrew, Director of the Killigrew Observatory, Dunedin, New Zealand.

The two friends slept bed to bed under an oleograph showing the Crane Gate, the observatory, and the Long Bridge in winter with ice floes.

Loewy and Puiseux, the selenographers of the Paris Observatory, are convinced that these great plains bear characteristic marks of the former presence of immense bodies of water.

Wilson and Palomar Observatories, found several technetium lines in the spectra of S-type stars.

Fortunately, a robotic observatory had been in orbit around Twinkler, and signs of the explosion had been detected early, in the form of a veritable avalanche of precursor neutrinos.

Our evolutionists are in very much the same plight with Mark Twain and his friend, who, having slept all day, rushed from the hotel in scanty clothing, climbed the observatory and to the amusement of the guests loudly admired what they took to be the famous Rigi sunrise, while in fact they were vociferating and gesticulating at the setting sun.

Cyan Gem, the middle sisters, had earned honors in science at Newmarch University and won research assistantships at the core-star observatory, studying the newly emergent planetics.

Though the barographs themselves gave no indication whence this wave had come, the variation in its intensity at different meteorological observatories could be accounted for by the law of inverse squares on the supposition that the explosion which started the wave had occurred at fifty-five degrees north, seventy-five degrees west.

The hill was taken, but was abandoned again by General Buller after he had used it for some hours as an observatory.

But the Martialists grudge no cost to render their scientific instruments, from the Observatory itself to the smallest lens or wheel it contains, as perfect as possible.

Rithrim to allow the observatory in order to obtain help in protecting their procreation center.

He went down first into the dank cellars of the Observatory of Paris, that famous Observatory where worked the great Le Verrier, who had done the proud feat of prophesying the existence of the planet Neptune.

The largest instruments of this type are the 36-inch Lick telescope and the 40-inch refractor of the Yerkes Observatory.

Cosmo asked on their first date at the Lowell Observatory on Mars Hill outside Flagstaff, where they took turns looking up at red Mars through the same refractor Percival Lowell had used to study the canals of the Red Planet a century ago.