Breed (v. t.) To produce as offspring |
Breed (v. t.) To take care of in infancy, and through the age of youth |
Breed (v. t.) To educate |
Breed (v. t.) To engender |
Breed (v. t.) To give birth to |
Breed (v. t.) To raise, as any kind of stock. |
Breed (v. t.) To produce or obtain by any natural process. |
Breed (v. i.) To bear and nourish young |
Breed (v. i.) To be formed in the parent or dam |
Breed (v. i.) To have birth |
Breed (v. i.) To raise a breed |
Breed (n.) A race or variety of men or other animals (or of plants), perpetuating its special or distinctive characteristics by inheritance. |
Breed (n.) Class |
Breed (n.) A number produced at once |
Draft (a.) Pertaining to, or used for, drawing or pulling (as vehicles, loads, etc.). Same as Draught. |
Draft (a.) Relating to, or characterized by, a draft, or current of air. Same as Draught. |
Draft (v. t.) To draw the outline of |
Draft (v. t.) To compose and write |
Draft (v. t.) To draw from a military band or post, or from any district, company, or society |
Draft (v. t.) To transfer by draft. |
Half-breed (a.) Half-blooded. |
Half-breed (n.) A person who is blooded |
Horse (n.) A hoofed quadruped of the genus Equus |
Horse (n.) The male of the genus horse, in distinction from the female or male |
Horse (n.) Mounted soldiery |
Horse (n.) A frame with legs, used to support something |
Horse (n.) A frame of timber, shaped like a horse, on which soldiers were made to ride for punishment. |
Horse (n.) Anything, actual or figurative, on which one rides as on a horse |
Horse (n.) 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 |
Horse (n.) See Footrope, a. |
Horse (a.) A breastband for a leadsman. |
Horse (a.) An iron bar for a sheet traveler to slide upon. |
Horse (a.) A jackstay. |
Horse (v. t.) To provide with a horse, or with horses |
Horse (v. t.) To sit astride of |
Horse (v. t.) To cover, as a mare |
Horse (v. t.) To take or carry on the back |
Horse (v. t.) To place on the back of another, or on a wooden horse, etc., to be flogged |
Horse (v. i.) To get on horseback. |
Horse-chestnut (n.) The large nutlike seed of a species of Aesculus (Ae. Hippocastanum), formerly ground, and fed to horses, whence the name. |
Horse-chestnut (n.) The tree itself, which was brought from Constantinople in the beginning of the sixteenth century, and is now common in the temperate zones of both hemispheres. The native American species are called buckeyes. |
Horse-drench (n.) A dose of physic for a horse. |
Horse-drench (n.) The appliance by which the dose is administred. |
Horse Guards () A body of cavalry so called |
Horse-jockey (n.) A professional rider and trainer of race horses. |
Horse-jockey (n.) A trainer and dealer in horses. |
Horse-leech (n.) A large blood-sucking leech (Haemopsis vorax), of Europe and Northern Africa. It attacks the lips and mouths of horses. |
Horse-leech (n.) A farrier |
Horse-leechery (n.) The business of a farrier |
Horse-litter (n.) A carriage hung on poles, and borne by and between two horses. |