From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishhangarhang‧ar /ˈhæŋə $ -ər/ noun [countable] TTAa very large building in which aircraft are kept
Examples from the Corpus
hangar• There was only one building-a hangar big enough to hold three planes.• Most of the sprawling sites contain huge blocks of flats, hospitals, aircraft hangars and weed-infested runways.• Granted, any skilled practitioner could make a set of numbers sew a quilt that could cover an airplane hangar.• Robert I know from our classes in the Eastern hangar at Lakefront.• Not the entire field, but the working area: the hangars, buildings, aircraft.• He left the hangars and worked his way towards the centre of the Heide.From Longman Business Dictionaryhangarhang‧ar /ˈhæŋə-ər/ noun [countable] a very large building where aircraft are keptOrigin hangar (1800-1900) French