How to Use boneyard in a Sentence

boneyard

noun
  • Max's house was of course, just next door to the boneyard.
    Craig Hlavaty, Houston Chronicle, 28 Dec. 2017
  • Max's house was, of course, just next door to the boneyard.
    Craig Hlavaty, Houston Chronicle, 10 Jan. 2018
  • The pink and green Watson's Flowers sign is among the crown jewels of the neon boneyard.
    Joshua Bowling, The Arizona Republic, 16 Feb. 2022
  • By the mid-60s, the plane that would become the Space Shuttle Cafe had been brought to a boneyard near Tucson.
    Kaya Laterman, New York Times, 28 June 2018
  • The boneyard has enough F-16s to keep Boatright busy for the next decade, and maybe even fuel a robot war.
    Wired, 19 Nov. 2019
  • More than a dozen B-1 bombers decommissioned by the Air Force have been flown to a boneyard in Tucson.
    From Usa Today Network and Wire Reports, USA TODAY, 27 Sep. 2021
  • That might have been the end of it—one more idea in the boneyard of promising but unfulfilled inventions.
    Gregory Mone, Discover Magazine, 22 Mar. 2013
  • But while the jumbo jet's service days might be over, not every 747 is headed for the boneyard.
    Eric Limer, Popular Mechanics, 7 Feb. 2019
  • The story could've ended there, with the plane finding its final resting place at a boneyard in the middle of Ohio.
    Chris Clarke, Popular Mechanics, 4 Jan. 2019
  • Decades-old Marine airplanes are being brought back from the boneyard.
    Eric Tegler, Popular Mechanics, 27 July 2018
  • Over the past decade a team from Ege University in Izmir has drilled 500 holes deep into Troad soil in a futile search for a large boneyard.
    Joshua Hammer, Smithsonian Magazine, 23 Feb. 2022
  • Pinal Airpark is sometimes called a graveyard or boneyard for planes.
    Dustin Chambers, The Seattle Times, 27 Jan. 2018
  • This week, 9to5 Google uncovered that the company plans to add its stand-alone Street View app to its infamous boneyard in the coming weeks.
    WIRED, 5 Nov. 2022
  • Two years of extreme drought have turned large stretches of northern Mexico into a boneyard.
    Los Angeles Times, 1 Aug. 2021
  • While many of the pieces are no longer illuminated, such as dozens of signs resting in the Insta-friendly boneyard, the galleries do contain pieces that are lit.
    Jennifer Nalewicki, Smithsonian Magazine, 28 Feb. 2020
  • Terri Nunn walking through a fighter jet boneyard with her own music video that’s already racked up over 17 million views ... before anyone has even seen the movie.
    Jen Yamato, Los Angeles Times, 26 May 2022
  • The boneyard became the city’s answer to overcrowded cemeteries in the 18th century.
    Mary Forgione, latimes.com, 18 Oct. 2017
  • Truncated bodies are common in old boneyards, where new graves often cut into old ones.
    Megan Gannon, Popular Science, 13 Apr. 2020
  • Pinal Airpark is one of only a handful of such aircraft boneyards located around the world, with the majority found in the American Southwest.
    Jennifer Nalewicki, Smithsonian, 30 Mar. 2017
  • Pinal Airpark is one of only a handful of such aircraft boneyards located around the world, with the majority found in the American Southwest.
    Jennifer Nalewicki, Smithsonian, 30 Mar. 2017
  • The moment the company stopped embracing speed, action and risk-taking, Bezos argued, was the day it was headed for the corporate boneyard.
    James Bandler, ProPublica, 28 Dec. 2019
  • Friesenhahn Cave probably became a fossil boneyard because of the way animals used it over thousands of years.
    Brendan Gibbons, San Antonio Express-News, 17 Dec. 2017
  • The after-hours, family-friendly event will feature a make-your-own-slime station, a whale boneyard, appearances by the aforementioned hagfish and more.
    Lisa Deaderick, sandiegouniontribune.com, 20 Oct. 2017
  • The after-hours family-friendly event will feature a make-your-own-slime station, a whale boneyard and appearances by the aforementioned hagfish.
    Karla Peterson, sandiegouniontribune.com, 13 Oct. 2017
  • The facility is used as an aircraft boneyard where the arid climate helps prevent aircraft corrosion.
    Jay Bennett, Popular Mechanics, 1 Aug. 2017
  • Financial woes forced Evergreen into bankruptcy and the supertanker seemed doomed to live out its existence in the boneyard.
    Chris Clarke, Popular Mechanics, 12 Aug. 2016
  • The twist, of course, is that in Las Vegas, a cat can have her own coffee bar, a singing cowboy can command center stage, and a Hollywood film director can transform a neon sign boneyard into a fine-art exhibit.
    Michael Hiller, Los Angeles Times, 21 Aug. 2019
  • Up until that moment, this historic piece of history was just lying in obscurity in a boneyard in Wisconsin.
    David Hambling, Popular Mechanics, 4 June 2019
  • It was rescued when an Air Force historian discovered it in a Wisconsin aircraft boneyard.
    Sig Christenson, San Antonio Express-News, 6 June 2018
  • Lakes racers would go out and pluck sturdy, lightweight parts from surplus military aircraft relegated to boneyards.
    Davey G. Johnson, Car and Driver, 16 June 2017

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'boneyard.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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