mega-shed

See also: megashed

English

Noun

mega-shed (plural mega-sheds)

  1. Alternative form of megashed
    • 1992 May 23, Larry Nager, “Island’s a tough sell for shows”, in The Commercial Appeal:
      Still, the amphitheater has virtues. Sight lines and acoustics are far better than you’ll find in larger facilities, the river view and Memphis skyline are unique and, nowadays, a 5,000-seat facility seems positively intimate compared with the modern mega-sheds.
    • 1992 September 16, “View from City Road: Plenty of mileage at Kingfisher”, in The Independent (London):
      First there were the friendly neighbourhood ironmongers. Then came the out-of- town superstore. Now, courtesy of Kingfisher, comes the next generation of DIY outlet, the mega-shed. Called Depot (and appropriately given the American pronunciation Dee Poe), at 70,000 sq ft these are twice the size of typical B&Q stores and stock double the number of lines.
    • 2013, Gert Spaargaren, Peter Oosterveer, Anne Loeber, Food Practices in Transition, →ISBN:
      With food governance becoming a cosmopolitan and (also) market-based affair, the role of citizen-consumers is no longer restricted to voting for the right party or demonstrating against mega-sheds for animal production.
    • 2014, Tim Holmes, Sara Hadwin, Glyn Mottershead, The 21st Century Journalism Handbook, →ISBN:
      Nowadays presses have become so large and so expensive that they are housed in their own mega-sheds, usually on an outlying industrial park that allows easy access for the lorries that bring in reels of paper and take out pallets of newspapers and magazines.

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