silo

[sahy-loh] /ˈsaɪ loʊ/
noun, plural silos.
1.
a structure, typically cylindrical, in which fodder or forage is kept.
2.
a pit or underground space for storing grain, green feeds, etc.
3.
Military. an underground installation constructed of concrete and steel, designed to house a ballistic missile and the equipment for firing it.
verb (used with object), siloed, siloing.
4.
to put into or preserve in a silo.
Origin
1825-35; < Spanish: place for storing grain, hay, etc., orig. subterranean; ulterior origin uncertain
Examples from the web for silo
  • Their loyalty to their silo frequently blinded them to the wider interests of the company as a whole.
  • There have been untold deaths from grain silo explosions over the past hundreds or perhaps thousands of years.
  • Too many companies have a silo approach to products and services.
  • And you definitely can't use them to see inside a nuclear bunker or silo.
  • It was so cold down there, you couldn't shove a shell into the gullet of a piece of artillery or a missile into a silo.
  • So this silo is not working with this silo, and now you have almost warring factions within companies.
  • The intestines and other organs can be gently squeezed into the belly with the help of a plastic pouch called a silo.
  • Olson's empty grain silo is useful only as a rustic image to promote his new vineyard and tasting room.
  • They reused a silo to hold a giant gas bag storing the methane.
  • There is a lone farm silo one mile east of my house.
British Dictionary definitions for silo

silo

/ˈsaɪləʊ/
noun (pl) -los
1.
a pit, trench, horizontal container, or tower, often cylindrical in shape, in which silage is made and stored
2.
a strengthened underground position in which missile systems are sited for protection against attack
Word Origin
C19: from Spanish, perhaps from Celtic
Word Origin and History for silo
n.

1835, from Spanish silo, traditionally derived from Latin sirum (nominative sirus), from Greek siros "a pit to keep corn in." "The change from r to l in Spanish is abnormal and Greek siros was a rare foreign term peculiar to regions of Asia Minor and not likely to emerge in Castilian Spain" [Barnhart]. Alternatively, the Spanish word is from a pre-Roman Iberian language word represented by Basque zilo, zulo "dugout, cave or shelter for keeping grain." Meaning "underground housing and launch tube for a guided missile" is attested from 1958.

silo in Technology


The FIFO input-character buffer in an EIA-232 serial line card. So called from DEC terminology used on DH and DZ line cards for the VAX and PDP-11, presumably because it was a storage space for fungible stuff that went in at the top and came out at the bottom.

Encyclopedia Article for silo

in agriculture, airtight structure that encloses and protects silage (q.v.; partially fermented fodder, called haylage if made from grass), keeping it in the succulent and slightly sour condition edible for farm animals.

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