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Showing results for radio shack. Search instead for Radio+Shack.

radio shack

American  

noun

Informal.
  1. a room or structure, as on a ship, for housing radio equipment.


Etymology

Origin of radio shack

First recorded in 1945–50

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Stinking fur seals lurk in the radio shack and among the overturned benches of the canteen.

From BBC • Jun. 9, 2014

In the radio shack, remote-reading indicators record the angle at which the searchlight beam bounces back.

From Time Magazine Archive

When the communiqu�the only real news in the meeting�was issued, it was sent down to the radio shack for transmission.

From Time Magazine Archive

Actors, technicians and equipment were toted hither & yon to get such actual backgrounds as the California Institute of Technology and the radio shack used by the Bureau to relay bogus information abroad.

From Time Magazine Archive

There were a billiard hall, radio shack, greenhouse, pigeon roost, and a place where prize-winning guinea pigs were raised.

From "Cheaper by the Dozen" by Frank B. Gilbreth Jr. and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey

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