¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Bunkhouses
1. bunkhouse [n] - See also: bunkhouse
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bunkhouses
Literary usage of Bunkhouses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Bulletin by Institution of Mining and Metallurgy (1904)
"The difficulty was overcome by the construction of temporary wooden bunkhouses
for single men and by increasing the permanent accommodation for staff and ..."
2. Handbook of Construction Equipment: Its Cost and Use by Richard Turner Dana (1921)
"Portable Sectional bunkhouses. The following is taken from Engineering News
Record, Jan. 17, 1918. The standard design adopted by the Pennsylvania E. R, ..."
3. Business Law for Business Men, State of California: A Reference Book Showing by Anthony Jennings Bledsoe (1912)
"In or at any camp where five or more persons are employed, the bunkhouses, tents
and other sleeping places of such employees shall be kept in a cleanly ..."
4. Mine Safety Rules (1918)
"In or at any camp where five or more persons are employed, the bunkhouses, tents
and other sleeping places of such employees shall be kept in a cleanly ..."
5. General health laws by California State Board of Health (1914)
"In or at any camp where five or more persons are employed, the bunkhouses, tents
and other sleeping places of such employees shall be kept in a cleanly ..."
6. History Pockets, Colonial America, Grades 4-6 by Marc Tyler Nobleman (2003)
"Draw and color the bunkhouses on all three sides of the fort close to the fence
lines. Historians think 20 bunkhouses were built. They were small, one-room ..."
7. The Japanese Problem in the United States: An Investigation for the by Harry Alvin Millis (1915)
"... had a similar language, accepted the same economic rank as the Chinese,
frequently occupied their bunkhouses, and underbid for work as did the Chinaman. ..."