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1 vee
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2 veehoeder
n. cattleman, cattle herder, one who works with cattle -
3 veepest
n. cattle plague, rinderpest, infectious viral disease (mainly found in cattle and sheep) -
4 een kudde vee
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5 grazen
♦voorbeelden:1 het vee laten grazen • let the cattle graze, put the cattle to pasture¶ te grazen genomen worden • be had, be taken iniemand te grazen nemen • 〈 bedotten〉 take someone for a ride, take someone in; 〈 pak slaag geven〉 give someone a beating -
6 het vee laten grazen
het vee laten grazenlet the cattle graze, put the cattle to pastureVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > het vee laten grazen
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7 rund
4 [biologisch geslacht] bovine animal♦voorbeelden: -
8 rundvee
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9 slachtvee
1 stock/cattle for slaughter(ing), beef (cattle) -
10 veewagen
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11 blaarkop
n. cattle with a blaze -
12 cornedbeef
n. corned beef, preserved beef, salted cattle meat, cured beef -
13 cowboy
n. cowboy, man who works with cattle; rodeo rider -
14 hoedster
n. female guardian of cattle -
15 hoornvee
n. horned cattle -
16 klauwzeer
n. foot and mouth disease, contagious viral disease of cattle and other cloven-footed animals marked by vesicular eruptions around the hoofs and mouth -
17 koejongen
n. cowboy, man who works with cattle -
18 melkvee
n. milch cattle -
19 niervet
n. suet, hard crumbly fat found in the kidneys or loins of cattle and other animals (used in cooking and making tallow) -
20 runderpest
n. cattle plague, rinderpest
См. также в других словарях:
Cattle — Cat tle (k[a^]t t l), n. pl. [OE. calet, chatel, goods, property, OF. catel, chatel, LL. captale, capitale, goods, property, esp. cattle, fr. L. capitals relating to the head, chief; because in early ages beasts constituted the chief part of a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
CATTLE — Cattle had been reared since the Neolithic in central Italy, although it has recently been suggested by geneticists that some of the white cattle distinctive of northern Etruria today may have had a more recent eastern Mediterranean origin.… … Historical Dictionary of the Etruscans
cattle — mid 13c., from Anglo Fr. catel property (O.N.Fr. catel, O.Fr. chatel), from M.L. capitale property, stock, neuter of Latin adj. capitalis principal, chief, from caput head (gen. capitis; see HEAD (Cf. head)). Cf. sense development of FEE … Etymology dictionary
cattle — [n] bovine animals beasts, bovid mammals, bulls, calves, cows, dogies*, herd, livestock, longhorn*, moo cows*, oxen, shorthorns, stock, strays; concept 394 … New thesaurus
cattle — ► PLURAL NOUN ▪ large ruminant animals with horns and cloven hoofs, domesticated for meat or milk or as beasts of burden; cows and oxen. ORIGIN Old French chatel chattel … English terms dictionary
cattle — [kat′ l] pl.n. [ME & Anglo Fr catel (OFr chatel) < ML captale, property, stock < L capitalis, principal, chief < caput, HEAD: orig. sense in var. CHATTEL] 1. Archaic farm animals collectively; livestock 2. domesticated oxen collectively; … English World dictionary
Cattle — Cow redirects here. For other uses, see Cow (disambiguation). For other uses, see Cattle (disambiguation). Cattle … Wikipedia
cattle — n. 1) to breed; raise (esp. AE), rear (BE) cattle 2) to drive; graze; round up cattle 3) to brand cattle 4) dairy; prize cattle 5) cattle graze 6) a head of cattle; a herd of cattle 7) young cattle are calves 8) female cattle are cows 9) male… … Combinatory dictionary
CATTLE — The domestication of cattle began in prehistoric times. Ancient Sumerian inscriptions refer to the raising of cattle, and from the third millennium B.C.E. they are depicted in Egyptian, Assyrian, and Babylonian drawings as used for plowing (see… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
cattle — cattleless, adj. /kat l/, n. (used with a pl. v.) 1. bovine animals, esp. domesticated members of the genus Bos. 2. Bib. such animals together with other domesticated quadrupeds, as horses, swine, etc. 3. Disparaging. human beings. [1175 1225; ME … Universalium
cattle — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ beef, dairy ▪ Highland, longhorn, shorthorn ▪ native ▪ wild ▪ … Collocations dictionary