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museum

museum [noun]
US /mjuːˈziː.əm/ 
UK /mjuːˈziː.əm/ 
Example: 

A museum of modern art

A building where objects of historical, scientific, or artistic interest are kept

museum - موزه
Persian equivalent: 
Example: 

A museum of modern art

Oxford Essential Dictionary

museum

 noun
a building where people can look at old or interesting things:
Have you ever been to the British Museum?

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

museum

museum S3 W2 /mjuːˈziəm $ mjʊ-/ BrE AmE noun [countable]
[Date: 1600-1700; Language: Latin; Origin: Greek Mouseion, from Mousa; ⇨ ↑muse2]
a building where important ↑cultural, historical, or scientific objects are kept and shown to the public:
the Museum of Modern Art
The museum has an extensive collection of early photographs.

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

museum

mu·seum [museum museums]   [mjuˈziːəm]    [mjuˈziːəm]  noun
a building in which objects of artistic, cultural, historical or scientific interest are kept and shown to the public
a museum of modern art
a science museum
 
Word Origin:
early 17th cent. (denoting a university building, specifically one erected at Alexandria by Ptolemy Soter): via Latin from Greek mouseion ‘seat of the Muses’, based on mousa ‘muse’.  
Culture:
art galleries and museums of art
In Britain, works of art are displayed in art galleries and, especially outside London, in museums. Shops that sell paintings are also called galleries. In the US public art collections are displayed in art museums, and a gallery is a place where people go to buy works of art.
Many galleries and museums in Britain and the US receive limited financial support from national or local government. Other money is raised through admission fees, although admission to many British museums is free, and the sale of postcards, calendars, etc. Some galleries obtain money through sponsorship. Many works of art are expensive and galleries can rarely buy them without organizing a public appeal or, in Britain, asking for money from the National Art Collections Fund.
Visiting an art gallery is a popular leisure activity. Galleries and museums are friendlier places than they used to be. Many try to encourage children’s interest in art by arranging school visits and many people make their first trip to an art museum with their school class.
The most popular galleries in Britain, all in London, are the National Gallery, the National Portrait Gallery, Tate Britain and Tate Modern. The Royal Academy's Summer Exhibition of paintings sent in by the general public also receives a lot of visitors. Sculpture attracts less attention, and though the names of Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth are known to many people, few could describe any of their works. Well-known galleries outside London include the National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh and the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.
Important art museums in the US include the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim Museum, all in New York, and the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. Most US cities and many smaller towns have art museums.
Galleries sometimes mount exhibitions of the paintings of one artist, e.g. Turner, that are brought together from all over the world. People are prepared to queue for a long time to see them. Many people admire old masters, famous works by great artists of the past, but have little interest in modern art. New works receive publicity in the media only when they are unusual or likely to shock people. Galleries and museums try to encourage a more positive attitude to modern art but many people remain doubtful. When the Tate displayed half a cow and its calf rotting in formaldehyde (= a chemical used to preserve it), the public criticized the artist, Damien Hirst. There is usually controversy about the winners of the Turner Prize 
Some exhibitions bring together all kinds of art, not only paintings, from a particular time or country so that people can learn about it. Exhibitions on subjects such as the Aztecs, art nouveau and the art of Turkey attract large crowds. 
Culture:
museums
Many people have a hobby that involves collecting things, e.g. stamps, postcards or antiques. In the 18th and 19th centuries wealthy people travelled and collected plants, animal skins, historical objects and works of art. They kept their collection at home until it got too big or until they died, and then it was given to a museum. The 80 000 objects collected by Sir Hans Sloane, for example, formed the core collection of the British Museum which opened in 1759.
The parts of a museum open to the public are called galleries or rooms. Often, only a small proportion of a museum’s collection is on display. Most of it is stored away or used for research. A person in charge of a department of a museum is called a keeper. Museum staff involved in the care and conservation of items are sometimes called curators.
Many museums are lively places and they attract a lot of visitors. As well as looking at exhibits, visitors can play with computer simulations and imagine themselves living at a different time in history or walking through a rainforest. At the Jorvik Centre in York, the city’s Viking settlement is recreated, and people experience the sights, sounds and smells of the old town. Historical accuracy is important but so also is entertainment. Museums must compete for people’s leisure time and money with other amusements. Most museums also welcome school groups and arrange special activities for children.
In Britain, the largest museums are the British Museum, the Science Museum, the Natural History Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum. Museums outside London also cover every subject and period. Homes of famous people sometimes become museums, such as the house where Shakespeare was born in Stratford-upon-Avon.
The first public museum in the US was the Charlestown Museum in South Carolina, founded in 1773. The largest is the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, a group of 14 museums. The most popular of these is the National Air and Space Museum. Some US museums are art museums. Many describe a period of history. In Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, for example, a museum explains the Civil War and gives details of the battle of Gettysburg. Halls of Fame are museums that honour people who have been outstanding in a certain field, e.g. baseball or rock music.
National museums receive money from the government but not enough to cover their costs. Museums usually have a shop selling books, postcards and gifts, and often a cafe. Their profits help to fund the museum. Some museums have the support of a commercial sponsor. In small museums only a few people have paid jobs, and the rest are volunteers, called docents in the US, who lead tours and answer visitors’ questions. 
Example Bank:
All the planes are museum pieces.
Although the mill is no longer in commercial use, it is maintained as a working museum.
He founded a museum of modern art in his home town.
Los Angeles County Art Museum
The first painting acquired by the museum was by Hopper.
The museum houses a fine collection of textiles.
The museum is housed in a converted church.
The website's print gallery is a virtual museum.
There's a gift shop in the museum.
a museum devoted to children's toys
a museum devoted to railway memorabilia
an exhibition of Chinese ceramics at the Ashmolean Museum
• an open-air museum of farming and the countryside

• one of the world's great museums

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition
 

museum / mjuːˈziː.əm / noun [ C ]

A1 a building where objects of historical, scientific, or artistic interest are kept:

a museum of modern art

the Natural History Museum

© Cambridge University Press 2013

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

museum

/mju:zi:əm/
(museums)

Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.

A museum is a building where a large number of interesting and valuable objects, such as works of art or historical items, are kept, studied, and displayed to the public.
For months Malcolm had wanted to visit the Parisian art museums.
...the American Museum of Natural History.

N-COUNT

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 

museum

mu·se·um /mjʊˈziːjəm/ noun, pl -ums [count] : a building in which interesting and valuable things (such as paintings and sculptures or scientific or historical objects) are collected and shown to the public
• an art museum
• a history museum
• a museum of natural history

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