cowboys

listen to the pronunciation of cowboys
English - Turkish

Definition of cowboys in English Turkish dictionary

cowboy
kovboy

Bir kovboy sığırları otlağa götürüyor. - A cowboy is driving cattle to the pasture.

Dün gece televizyondaki kovboy filmini izledin mi? - Did you see the cowboy movie on TV last night?

cowboy
sığırtmaç
cowboy
{i} usta binici
cowboy
{i} sığır çobanı
English - English
two kings as a starting hand in Texas hold 'em
A professional football team located in Dallas, Texas
Any of various high school and collegiate teams so named
{i} name of the athletic teams at Oklahoma State University (USA); professional football team from Dallas (Texas, USA)
two kings as a starting hand in Texas hold em
plural of cowboy
cowboys and Indians
A game in which the players assume the traditional roles of cowboys and Indians
cowboy
A man who identifies with cowboy culture, including wearing a cowboy hat and being a fan of country and western music
cowboy
A dishonest and incompetent independent tradesman
cowboy
To work as a cowboy, herding cattle

I still had never ridden or cowboyed, and I wanted to learn something about it. I'd been making the damn saddles for years but didn't know how to use them.

cowboy
A king (the playing card)
cowboy
A man who tends free-range cattle, especially in the American West
singing cowboys
plural form of singing cowboy
Dallas Cowboys
the main football team in Dallas, Texas
Dallas Cowboys
leading American professional football team
cowboy
a hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horseback
cowboy
a fan of Country-Western music
cowboy
Generally a ranch hand that was skilled in various ranch duties such as bronc busting, roundup, roping, and riding and possessed a great knowledge of horses Many Canadian cowboys came to the prairies from the United States while others were from the British upper-middle classes Most were employed on the southern ranches and took part in the annual round-up The image of the cowboy has been wildly romanticized by Hollywood in the twentieth century as an independent, rough and tough figure bedecked in chaps, with a six-shooter at his side, cowboy boots and, of course, his cowboy hat Their myth, as much as their reality, has come to symbolize the western life and spirit
cowboy
a hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horseback someone who is reckless or irresponsible (especially in driving vehicles) a performer who gives exhibitions of riding and roping and bulldogging
cowboy
A cowboy is a man employed to look after cattle in North America, especially in former times
cowboy
a person who tends cattle
cowboy
One of the marauders who, in the Revolutionary War infested the neutral ground between the American and British lines, and committed depredations on the Americans
cowboy
a person who dresses like a US cowboy, especially one who wears a cowboy hat
cowboy
a person who tends cattle in the US West or Southwest
cowboy
{i} man who works with cattle; rodeo rider
cowboy
a person from the US West or Southwest
cowboy
a performer who gives exhibitions of riding and roping and bulldogging
cowboy
A nickname for Kings, more often heard in the plural
cowboy
Holding the knees apart in a somersault to speed up rotation
cowboy
A cowboy is a male character in a western. cowboy films
cowboy
someone who is reckless or irresponsible (especially in driving vehicles)
cowboy
a dishonest and incompetent independent tradesman. A cowboy plumber may collect a large fee in advance, and leave floods and the need for expensive corrective work behind
cowboy
A cattle herder; a drover; specifically, one of an adventurous class of herders and drovers on the plains of the Western and Southwestern United States
cowboy
disapproval You can refer to someone who runs a business as a cowboy if they run it dishonestly or are not experienced, skilful, or careful in their work. We don't want to look like a bunch of cowboys. Horseman skilled at handling cattle in the U.S. West. From 1820, cowboys were employed in small numbers on Texas ranches, where they had learned the skills of the vaquero (Spanish: "cowboy"). After the Civil War, their numbers rapidly multiplied as cattle raising evolved into a lucrative industry throughout the western territories. Cowboys rounded up and branded the cattle, kept watch over the herd, and drove those ready for market to railroad towns. As the agricultural frontier moved west, the open range was transformed into farms, and by 1890 cowboys had been forced to settle on ranches. The romance of their image lived on in U.S. folklore and through movies and television
cowboy
{i} cowpoke
cowboy
{i} cowpuncher
cowboy
{i} cowhand
cowboy
cow puncher
cowboys
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