Definition von horse im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
- A poker variant consisting of five different poker variants, with the rules changing from one variant to the next after every hand
- Heroin
Alright, mate, got any horse?.
- To provide with a horse
- A hoofed mammal (scientific name Equus caballus)
A cowboy's greatest friend is his horse.
- A large person
Every linebacker they have is a real horse.
- The chess piece representing a knight, depicted as a man in a suit of armor and often on a horse, hence the nickname
Now just remind me how the horse moves again?.
- Cavalry soldiers (often capitalized)
All the King's Horse and all the King's Men, couldn't put Humpty together again.
- Any current or extinct animal of the family Equidae, including the zebra or the ass
These bone features, distinctive in the zebra, are actually present in all horses.
- To frolic, to act mischieviously. Usually followed by "around"
If you're going to horse around, we'll never get this done.
- A rope stretching along a yard, upon which men stand when reefing or furling the sails; foot ropes
- In gymnastics, a piece of equipment with a body on two or four legs, approximately four feet high with two handles on top
She's scored very highly with the parallel bars, let's see how she does with the horse.
- {n} a quadruped for draft or carriage, a machine of various kinds for support, a rope upon a yard for seamen to stand on, cavalry
- {v} to mount, ride, furnish with horses
- It has six broad molars, on each side of each jaw, with six incisors, and two canine teeth, both above and below
- To provide with a horse, or with horses; to mount on, or as on, a horse
- The horse differs from the true asses, in having a long, flowing mane, and the tail bushy to the base
- A Tongan
- Mounted soldiery; cavalry; used without the plural termination; as, a regiment of horse; distinguished from foot
- When you talk about the horses, you mean horse races in which people bet money on the horse which they think will win. He still likes to bet on the horses
- The horse does not appear in early examples of heraldry, although the winged horse is seen as the badge of the Order of the Temple A bay horse is known as a bayard, while the grey horse is a liard When the horse id displayed caparisoned; when in the field, he is free
- A breastband for a leadsman
- caballus, which was domesticated in Egypt and Asia at a very early period
- provide with a horse or horses
- A vaulting horse is a tall piece of gymnastics equipment for jumping over
- To sit astride of; to bestride
- A large hoofed animal (scientific name Equus caballus)
- A male horse, aged four and up
- One of a number of animals which moved into the birch and pine wooded landscape and marshland after the last ice age around 15,000 BC The domesticated horse is believed to have appeared in the Ukraine in eastern Europe as food around 4000 BC, and for riding in central Asia around 2500 BC The domestic animal is believed to be a descendant of Przewalsky's horse The earliest evidence of the horse in Britain was found at ??? Horse bridles and bits appeared around 1800 BC, and became more elaborate during the Bronze Age and Iron Age
- A frame of timber, shaped like a horse, on which soldiers were made to ride for punishment
- Unlike the asses it has callosities, or chestnuts, on all its legs
- Anything, actual or figurative, on which one rides as on a horse; a hobby
- See Footrope, a
- Horse enters in a race
- A Loa, possessing a person, is said sometimes to "dance in the head" of that person, but the more traditional expression is that the Loa "rides" the person's head The person is thus regarded as the "horse" (in French, "cheval" of the Loa )
- Another term for the stringer or supporting member of the staircase
- {i} large four-legged mammal commonly used for transportation; type of gymnastics equipment
- n kuda
- A jackstay
- Barren rock interrupting a vein of ore
- A translation or other illegitimate aid in study or examination; called also trot, pony, Dobbin
- A hoofed quadruped of the genus Equus; especially, the domestic horse E
- To take or carry on the back; as, the keeper, horsing a deer
- Waste rock found deposited within a vein
- An iron bar for a sheet traveler to slide upon
- A knight
- To cover, as a mare; said of the male
- If you hear something from the horse's mouth, you hear it from someone who knows that it is definitely true. He has got to hear it from the horse's mouth. Then he can make a judgment as to whether his policy is correct or not. see also clothes horse, dark horse, rocking horse, seahorse. horse around/about to play roughly horseplay. Equine species (Equus caballus) long used by humans as a means of transport and as a draft animal. Its earliest ancestor was the dawn horse (see Eohippus). The only living horse not descended from the domestic horse is Przewalski's horse. The horse was apparently first domesticated by nomadic peoples of Central Asia in the 3rd millennium BC. For many centuries horses were primarily used in warfare. The saddle was introduced in China in the first centuries AD. Horses were reintroduced to the New World, after wild horses had become extinct there some 10,000 years earlier, by the Spanish in the 16th century. A mature male is called a stallion or, if used for breeding, a stud; mature females are called mares. A castrated stallion is called a gelding. Young horses (foals) are also known as colts (males) and fillies (females). A horse's height is measured in 4-in. (10.2-cm) units, or hands, from the highest point of the back (withers) to the ground. Breeds are classified by size and build: draft (heavy) horses (e.g., Belgian, Percheron) are heavy-limbed and up to 20 hands high; ponies (e.g., Shetland, Iceland) are less than 14.2 hands high; and light horses (e.g., Arabian, Thoroughbred) are intermediate, rarely taller than 17 hands. American Saddle Horse Arabian horse Crazy Horse cutting horse horse racing horse chestnut family pommel horse side horse Przewalski's horse quarter horse Quarter horse racing sea horse Tennessee Walking Horse Plantation Walking Horse White Horse Vale of the
- A mass of earthy matter, or rock of the same character as the wall rock, occurring in the course of a vein, as of coal or ore; hence, to take horse said of a vein is to divide into branches for a distance
- To get on horseback
- The mares usually have the canine teeth rudimentary or wanting
- solid-hoofed herbivorous quadruped domesticated since prehistoric times
- solid-hoofed herbivorous quadruped domesticated since prehistoric times a padded gymnastic apparatus on legs provide with a horse or horses
- troops trained to fight on horseback; "500 horse led the attack"
- Horseplay; tomfoolery
- a padded gymnastic apparatus on legs
- {f} furnish with a horse; ride a horse; carry on one's back
- The horse excels in strength, speed, docility, courage, and nobleness of character, and is used for drawing, carrying, bearing a rider, and like purposes
- To place on the back of another, or on a wooden horse, etc
- Cavalry soldiers
- A frame with legs, used to support something; as, a clotheshorse, a sawhorse, etc
- A horse is a large animal which people can ride. Some horses are used for pulling ploughs and carts. A small man on a grey horse had appeared
- HORSERADISH, of course "Who can tell me what's in horseradish?" Grated horseradish, vinegar and SALT!
- to be flogged; to subject to such punishment
- a chessman in the shape of a horse's head; can move two squares horizontally and one vertically (or vice versa)
- a framework for holding wood that is being sawed
- The male of the genus horse, in distinction from the female or male; usually, a castrated male
- equine
- caba
- yarraman
- horsie
- horse and cart
- A cart, pulled by a horse and driven by a driver, used for transporting goods
- horse and rabbit stew
- A mixture of the crude and the delicate in grossly unequal quantities, with the crude overwhelmingly dominant
- horse archer
- A cavalryman armed with a bow
- horse archers
- plural form of horse archer
- horse armor
- Armor for a horse in battle
Thus, some types of Spanish horse armor consisted of heavy leather covers for the entire body of the horse and covering the head.
- horse armor
- Purchasable downloadable content that provides only cosmetic effect, with no actual enhancement to gameplay or to player stats
Valve just wants to make sure anything they release and sell for the game will have real value.We don't want to give you horse armor, he said.. Kotaku. Gawker Media: 2008-08-31. URL accessed on 2008-09-01.
- horse around
- To play or fiddle; to clown; to do nothing of importance or consequence
Stop horsing around with the controls, before you break something.
- horse bean
- broad bean, Vicia faba
- horse beans
- plural form of horse bean
- horse blanket
- currency in the 1800s consisting of large size notes/bills
Typically your small size (the same physical size as regular money, as opposed to the old horse blankets) silver certificate is worth about 5% more than face.
- horse blanket
- A blanket placed underneath the saddle of a horse
- horse blankets
- plural form of horse blanket
- horse hockey
- An expression of disbelief or disgust
- horse hockey
- False or deceitful statements; lies; exaggerations; nonsense. (a euphemism for horseshit)
- horse mackerel
- a large fish; variously the Australian bonito (Sarda australis), the pilot fish (Naucrates ductor), or the jack mackerel (genus Trachurus)
- horse mackerels
- plural form of horse mackerel
- horse of a different color
- An unrelated or only incidentally related matter with distinctly different significance
Against physical danger I am willing to offer myself at any time to your Highness . . . . But to walk straight into jail, with my eyes open, that's a horse of a different color..
- horse of a different colour
- Alternative spelling of horse of a different color
- horse opera
- A theatrical production, film, or program on radio or television depicting adventures of characters in the American Old West; a western
Three new examples of Hollywood's staple commodity, the horse opera, all filmed in color, contain the full quota of galloping and gunplay.
- horse opera
- An equestrian show, as in a circus
Nor is it much easier to give the analysis of this extraordinary odyssey, which relates the trials, sufferings, and adventures of an ex-Sous-Prefêt, who has married a circus rider, and has abandoned home, friends, and position, to become the manager of an itinerant horse-opera.
- horse operas
- plural form of horse opera
- horse piss
- Lies, untruths
- horse piss
- Nonsense, gibberish
- horse power
- a machine that used draft horses as a source of power
- horse puckey
- An alternative form of horse hockey
- horse pucky
- nonsense; feces
That is just a bunch of horse pucky.
- horse race
- An exciting and arduous competition (as in a political campaign)
- horse race
- A competitive race for horses carrying jockeys; often the subject of betting
- horse races
- plural form of horse race
- horse racing
- a sport where horses and their jockeys compete to be fastest
- horse sense
- Common sense, especially with a connotation of folk wisdom independent from, and trumping, formal education
- horse trailer
- a transport for a horse
- horse whip
- riding whip, crop
- horse whisperer
- A horse trainer who adopts a sympathetic view of the motives, needs, and desires of the horse, based on modern equine psychology
- horse whisperers
- plural form of horse whisperer
- horse's ass
- A thing or person which is visually unappealing
That is one horse's ass of a paint job.
- horse's ass
- A jerk; an unpleasant, unlikable person; an asshole
At the party he behaved like a real horse's ass.
- horse's doovers
- An hors d'oeuvre
everyone throws their hats in the air and shouts hoorah! and then it's all over bar the drinks and horses' doovers and findin' your own hat.
- horse's mouth
- Source; someone who directly experienced or witnessed something
- horse-chestnut
- A species of trees of the genus Aesculus as it is known in Eurasia, common in the temperate zones of both hemispheres and called buckeyes in America
- horse-chestnut
- The large nutlike seed of these trees
- horse-drawn
- pulled along by a horse
- horse-hockey
- Attributive form of horse hockey, noun
- horse-opera
- Alternative spelling of horse opera
- horse-power
- Obsolete spelling of horse power
- horse-power
- Alternative spelling of horsepower
- horse-race
- Attributive form of horse race
horse-race participant.
- horse-whispering
- Any of various gentle techniques of training or breaking horses
- horse archer
- A horse archer (or horsed archer, mounted archer) is a cavalryman armed with a bow. The horse archer was the archetypical warrior of the Eurasian steppe and of the American prairies
- horse bean
- (Botanik, Bitkibilim) Vicia faba, the broad bean, fava bean, faba bean, horse bean, field bean, tic bean is a species of bean (Fabaceae) native to north Africa and southwest Asia, and extensively cultivated elsewhere. Although usually classified in the same genus Vicia as the vetches, some botanists treat it in a separate monotypic genus as Faba sativa Moench
- horse trade
- Hard and shrewd bargaining
- horse trading
- (deyim) Hard and shrewd bargaining
- horse whisperer
- A horse whisperer is a horse trainer who adopts a sympathetic view of the motives, needs, and desires of the horse, based on modern equine psychology. The term goes back to the early nineteenth century when an Irish horseman, Daniel Sullivan, made a name for himself in England by rehabilitating horses that had become vicious and intractable due to abuse or accidental trauma
- Horse Guards
- Royal Horse Guards
- horse balm
- Any of several strongly aromatic, eastern North American plants of the genus Collinsonia, having opposite leaves, square stems, and axillary clusters of lemon-scented yellow flowers
- horse bean
- a bean plant cultivated for use animal fodder
- horse brush
- brush used brush down a horse
- horse cart
- heavy cart; drawn by a horse; used for farm work
- horse cassia
- tropical American semi-evergreen tree having erect racemes of pink or rose-colored flowers; used as an ornamental
- horse cavalry
- an army unit mounted on horseback
- horse chestnut
- Horse chestnuts are the nuts of a horse chestnut tree. They are more commonly called conkers
- horse chestnut
- tree having palmate leaves and large clusters of white to red flowers followed by brown shiny inedible seeds
- horse gentian
- Any of various plants of the genus Triosteum, having opposite leaves, small purplish-brown flowers, and leathery orange-yellow fruit. Also called feverwort
- horse guards
- A body of cavalry so called; esp
- horse latitudes
- Either of two belts of latitudes located over the oceans at about 30° to 35° north and south, having high barometric pressure, calms, and light, changeable winds
- horse mackerel
- largest tuna; to 1500 pounds; of mostly temperate seas: feed in polar regions but breed in tropics
- horse mackerel
- large elongated compressed food fish of the Atlantic waters of Europe
- horse mackerel
- California edible fish; largest tuna that weighs up to 1500 pounds (680.389 kilos)
- horse mackerel
- a California food fish
- horse manure
- horse excreta used as fertilizer
- horse mushroom
- coarse edible mushroom with a hollow stem and abroad white cap
- horse nettle
- A prickly-stemmed plant (Solanum carolinense) of eastern and central North America, having purplish or white star-shaped flowers and yellowish berries
- horse of a different color
- (Slang) entirely different subject, something that is totally unrelated (to something else), irrelevant issue
- horse opera
- A film or other theatrical work about the American West; a western
- horse power
- A unit of power, used in stating the power required to drive machinery, and in estimating the capabilities of animals or steam engines and other prime movers for doing work
- horse power
- unit for measuring the power of engines (equal to 746 watts); unit of the supplier of energy (approximately 760 watts)
- horse power
- A machine worked by a horse, for driving other machinery; a horse motor
- horse power
- It is the power required for the performance of work at the rate of 33,000 English units of work per minute; hence, it is the power that must be exerted in lifting 33,000 pounds at the rate of one foot per minute, or 550 pounds at the rate of one foot per second, or 55 pounds at the rate of ten feet per second, etc
- horse race
- professional competition of speed of horses and their riders
- horse riding
- Horse riding is the activity of riding a horse, especially for enjoyment or as a form of exercise
- horse semen
- fluid containing a horse's sperm
- horse sense
- common sense, plain good sense
- horse sense
- common sense: sound practical judgment; "I can't see the sense in doing it now"; "he hasn't got the sense God gave little green apples"; "fortunately she had the good sense to run away"
- horse sense
- Common sense; gumption
- horse show
- A horse show is a sporting event in which people riding horses compete in order to demonstrate their skill and control. a sports event in which people compete to show their skill in riding horses
- horse trader
- a hard bargainer
- horse trading
- negotiation accompanied by mutual concessions and shrewd bargaining
- horse trading
- the swapping of horses (accompanied by much bargaining)
- horse's foot
- the hoof of a horse
- horse-and-buggy
- relating to the time before automobiles (and other inventions) changed the way people lived in industrialized nations
- horse-chestnut family
- Family Hippocastanaceae, composed of the buckeyes and the horse chestnuts (genus Aesculus), native to the northern temperate zone. The best-known species of horse chestnut is the common, or European, horse chestnut (A. hippocastanum), native to southeastern Europe but widely cultivated as a large shade and street tree. The Champs-Élysées in Paris is lined with rows of horse-chestnut trees
- horse-drawn
- A horse-drawn carriage, cart, or other vehicle is one that is pulled by one or more horses. a horse-drawn open-topped carriage. horse-drawn vehicles are pulled by a horse
- horse-drawn
- pulled by a horse; "a horse-drawn carriage
- horse-drawn
- pulled by a horse; "a horse-drawn carriage"
- horse-grooming
- brushing and cleaning of a horse
- horse-radish
- plant with an edible hot-tasting root
- horse-riding
- the activity of riding horses = riding
- horse-trade
- negotiate with much give and take
- horse-trading
- When negotiation or bargaining is forceful and shows clever and careful judgment, you can describe it as horse-trading. when the people, especially business people or politicians, who are involved in a discussion try hard to gain an advantage for their own side - used to show disapproval
- horse-trail
- a trail for horses
- horselike
- Similar to a horse
- A horse
- caballo
- A horse
- stot
- A horse
- prad
- Horselike
- horsly
- a horse
- capel
- a horse
- caple
- a horse
- rackabones
- horse around
- indulge in horseplay; "Enough horsing around--let's get back to work!"; "The bored children were fooling about
- horse chestnut
- {i} tree that bears leaves that resemble fingers and clusters of white flowers and brown smooth bitter nutlike seed that cannot be eaten; bitter nutlike seed of the horse chestnut
- horse chestnut
- A horse chestnut is a large tree which has leaves with several pointed parts and shiny reddish-brown nuts called conkers that grow in cases with points on them
- horse power
- The power which a horse exerts
- horse radish
- coarse Eurasian plant cultivated for its thick white pungent root
- horsed
- past of horse
- horseless
- {s} lacking a horse
- horseless
- not requiring a horse; said of certain vehicles in which horse power has been replaced by electricity, steam, etc
- horseless
- Not having a horse
- horseless
- as, a horseless carriage or truck
- horseless
- Being without a horse; specif
- horselike
- resembling a horse
- horselike
- Similar to that of a horse; as, a horselike head
- horselike
- {s} of a horse, resembling a horse, like a horse
- horses
- third-person singular of horse
- horses
- plural of horse
- horsing
- present participle of horse
- horsing
- {i} (in Poker) act of passing small sum of money to another player after winning the pot in a game
- horsing
- Another word for scooting - the practice of passing a small amount of money to another player after winning a pot