Storey
name, noun ·Uncommon ·Advanced level
Definitions
- 1 A floor or level of a building or ship.
"For superstitious reasons, many buildings number their 13th storey as 14, bypassing 13 entirely."
- 2 a structure consisting of a room or set of rooms at a single position along a vertical scale wordnet
- 3 A vertical level in certain letters, such as a and g.
"The IPA symbol for a voiced velar stop is the single-storey , not the double-storey"
- 4 A building; an edifice. obsolete
- 1 A surname.
- 2 An unincorporated community in Madera County, California, United States.
Example
More examples"Did you hear the story about the bungee jumper who died because he miscalculated the height of each storey before diving off a building?"
Etymology
From Middle English story, via Medieval Latin historia (“narrative, illustraton, frieze”) from Ancient Greek ἱστορίᾱ (historíā, “learning through research”). The current sense arose from narrative friezes on upper levels of medieval buildings, esp. churches. Doublet of story and history. An alternative etymology derives Middle English story from Old French *estoree (“a thing built, building”), from estoree (“built”), feminine past participle of estorer (“to build”), from Latin instaurare (“to construct, build, erect”), but this seems unlikely since historia already had the meaning "storey of a building" in Anglo-Latin.
Originates from the Old Norse personal epithet “Stóri”, a derivative of “Storr” which means “large” or “big”. Even though it has been established that the root of the name is “Storr”, R.E.K. Rigbeye, in his book The Storey’s of Old claims that the suffix “ey[e]”, in the variant of Storey, is equivalent to the Icelandic “ig” and signifies “water”. According to him, “Storr” also denotes large in the sense of vast and rough.
Related phrases
More for "storey"
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.