Ware refers to goods or material. Its plural is wares. Ware forms part of many compound words, like warehouse, a place for storing things, and housewares, a word for goods used around the home. Here are a few more examples, “Show me your wares,” said the trader to the merchant.
Ware was home to three major manufacturers: Otis, Stevens and the Gilbert companies, who were noted for their production of textiles, clothing and shoes. Their demand for labor brought numerous immigrant families, primarily French, Irish and Polish, to this rich job market.
In 1898, the pharmaceutical company, Allen & Hanburys, acquired a lease on the Ware corn mill and began building a medicines, dried milk and health foods factory at the nearby Buryfield.
The meaning of WARE is manufactured articles, products of art or craft, or farm produce : goods —often used in combination. How to use ware in a sentence.
Ware, town (parish), East Hertfordshire district, administrative and historic county of Hertfordshire, southeast-central England. The parish is situated on the northern periphery of the metropolitan area of Greater London. In ancient times it was probably the site of a fishing weir on the River Lea. Later it became an important malting centre.
From Middle English ware, from Old English waru, from Proto-West Germanic *waru, from Proto-Germanic *warō (“attention”) as in beware, in the sense of “an object of care, a valuable”, [1] from Proto-Indo-European *wer- (“to watch, keep guard”), whence also ward.
- watchful, wary, or cautious. 2. aware; conscious. 3. to beware of (usu. used in the imperative).
Wonderful experience at Ware Escape Rooms completing ‘The Locked Inn’. Despite only being one room, very well thought out and the addition of a bartender actor is brilliant.