A building (or section of a building) used to store a car or cars, tools and other miscellaneous items.
The word 'garage' is correct and usable in written English. You can use it to refer to an enclosed structure where a car or other vehicle is kept, or a workshop space for repairs or hobbies. Example sentence: John likes to spend his free time working on cars in his garage.
Police found the video tape in a London garage.
Unsuccessful contestants are then forced to exit by attempting to lift the notoriously tricksy, rust-riddled garage door, while successful candidates are allowed to exit using the side door and taken directly on to the O2 Arena stage where they'll perform again in front of thousands of hysterical fans.
He's almost done to dubstep what me and Benga did to garage".
As founder and chief executive, the 47-year-old Bezos has taken his retailer from a Seattle garage to the frontier of publishing.
Pietersen required just 27 balls to make it 150, with Hughes dispatched back over his head for two sixes in one over, the first of which will see the panel-beater at the local garage earn some extra business.
Richard's dad had recording equipment in his garage, so Nick and I would be there for hours recording adverts and dubbing them and recording our own little radio shows.
Or the reverential: Una Pizza Napoletana in SoMa, where tattooed Anthony Mangieri crafts his naturally-leavened pies in the centre of the tall, stark former garage before briefly blasting them in the huge wood-fired oven.
Being a terminologist, I care about word choice. Ludwig simply helps me pick the best words for any translation. Five stars!
Maria Pia Montoro
Terminologist and Q/A Analyst @ Translation Centre for the Bodies of the European Union