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20 Sentences With "stud horse"

How to use stud horse in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "stud horse" and check conjugation/comparative form for "stud horse". Mastering all the usages of "stud horse" from sentence examples published by news publications.

She wanted to bring a stud horse to the United States to help enhance the Friesian breed, which was relatively uncommon here.
The teasers spend their time with foreplay, getting kicked by the mare until she's finally ready to mate, and then they send the "real stud" horse in to do the job.
Wilhelm Tell II was imported to the United States in 1985 from Niedersaches Landgestut Celle as a breeding stallion. After that, his main use was to be a stud horse. He died in the summer of 2008 due to cancer.
The Case of the One-Eyed Killer Stud Horse is the eighth book in the Hank the Cowdog series of children's novels by John R. Erickson. It is preceded by The Curse of the Incredible Priceless Corncob and followed by The Case of the Halloween Ghost.
American prospectors first came to Wild Horse River in the fall of 1863. The river was originally known as Stud Horse Creek. The Wild Horse River yielded close to $7,000,000 in gold during the gold rush. The river is considered to be one of the greatest gold creeks in the entire province of British Columbia.
By 1911, Bryn Mawr had been given to the Maryland Breeding Bureau and was a stud horse at the farm of R. J. Walden in Middleburg. Relocated to Canterbury Farms in Saratoga Springs, he was sold for $1,000 in August 1922 to J.H. Lewis. Bryn Mawr died in June 1923 in Cleveland. He was considered to be a good broodmare sire.
Lyons Press Horseman's Dictionary p. 201 Two types, box stall (US) or loose box (UK) and tie stall (US) or stall (UK). ;stallion :A mature, uncastrated male horse, usually four years old and older, although sometimes refers to a horse three years of age or older. Other terms include entire, stud, stud horse, full, full horse, stone horse, stock horse, or bull.
The year after Bowie's birth, the family moved to Logan County in the brand-new state of Kentucky. By 1796, his father owned 8 slaves, 7 horses, 11 head of cattle, and 1 stud horse. The following year the family acquired along the Red River. In 1800, Rezin Bowie sold his property and the family spent two years in what would become Missouri many years later.
Pete escapes and runs into the pasture with the little girls after him. The stud horse sees them and gallops toward them aggressively. When Hank tries to get between the horse and the girls, the horse kicks him, breaking his leg. The book ends with Hank in the house, being fussed over by the girls, after having his leg set by the local veterinarian.
Whiskery was sold in 1927 to the Stone-Hancock-Woodward partnership for $60,000 for use as a stud horse. However, he proved to be sterile and was put back into training as a gelding. Whiskery did not achieve his previous racing success and was finally shipped in 1931 to the Charles Stone's Morven Stud in Charlottesville, Virginia for use as a saddle horse. Jim Bolus.
As a consequence, Copiad moved abroad, and has since 2004 been acting as a stud horse in both Hungary and Germany. In September 2009, it was reported that Copiad had retired from his career as a breeding stallion. As a consequence, he was moved from Germany to breeder Trygve Kraft in Värmland, Sweden. When Copiad lost the covering permission in 2003, it was due to a lack of successful offspring.
Meanwhile, the neighbor's stallion has escaped from his pasture and gotten into the pasture with Sally May's and her husband Loper's mares. Loper has other work to do and as the neighbor is unavailable, says he'll get the stud horse out later. He forbids the children, his nieces and son Alfred, from going in the pasture. The children begin playing tea party, dressing Hank, the younger dog Drover, and Pete the barncat in doll clothes.
According to Tait's arrest warrant, he had been engaging in sex acts with a stud horse over a span of several months. Tait and Thomason admitted to engaging in sex acts with a horse. "James Tait, 58, was arrested and charged Thursday with three counts of felony animal cruelty in Maury County, Tenn." In January 2010, Tait pleaded guilty in a Tennessee court to engaging in sexual acts with animals, and was placed on probation.
The Curse of the Incredible Priceless Corncob is the seventh in the Hank the Cowdog series of children's novels by John R. Erickson. It is preceded by Let Sleeping Dogs Lie and followed by The Case of the One-eyed Killer Stud Horse. Like almost all the Hank the Cowdog books, this one begins with Hank saying, "It's me again, Hank the Cowdog." The characters are: Hank the Cowdog, Drover, Pete the Barncat, High Loper, and Sally May.
Drover appears in every story in the series, with the exception of A1: The Homeless Pooch. Sally May: Sally May is the wife of High Loper and the mother of Little Alfred and Baby Molly. She is a housewife who enjoys parties and often serves as a civilizing check on her cowboy husband. She is often high-strung, particularly in "The Case of the Killer Stud Horse" and "The Phantom in the Mirror", when she has company coming over.
As a yearling, he was sold to J. B. Lewman for $500[1]. His Eminence was ridden in the 1901 Derby by African- American jockey James Winkfield.His Eminence Pedigree His Eminence also won the Wenona Stakes as a two-year-old and the Clark Handicap as a three-year- old. The colt was purchased in the latter part of 1901 for $15,000 by millionaire racing enthusiast Clarence Mackay as a stud horse, but was later sold in 1902 due to the death of Mackay's father.
Blue Gown was eventually retired from racing as a five-year-old and was sent to Germany as a stud horse, where he was very successful. In 1879, Blue Gown was transferred back to England to the Marden Deer Park Stud in Caterham, Surrey. He was bought by American horseman James R. Keene in 1880 for £13,300 ($20,000) and was placed aboard the steamship Victoria for his trans-Atlantic crossing to New York. The ship ran into very stormy weather on November 25, leading to the destruction of its rudder and to the death of Blue Gown, who thrashed about in his cabin and ruptured a bowel.
There are two types of Mezen, a lighter type with a dished face and a heavier type. They are noted for their resistance to insects. It is also stated that they can survive on a diet of moss and fish, and that if "it gets stuck in snow up to the chest, it can jump out, like a mouse." It is unclear if the origins of the Mezen horse lie in Prince V. V. Golitsyn bringing his stud horse to Archangelsk; in Peter the Great ordering stallions from Obvin to Mezen to improve the local horses; or in Catherine the Great ordering Danish horses be sent to the area.
A variant of the last two lines of the stanza is found in the Beddau in Peniarth 98: "before his doom came, he was a man who invited attack." The poem Kateir Kerrituen ("Song of Cerridwen") states that he fell at Arllechwedd, whilst also giving him a son, Minawg fab Lleu. A variant translation suggests conversely that it was Minawg who was killed, at the "slope of Lleu". The Triads of the Horses name his horse as Melyngan Mangre ("Yellow-white Stud-horse"), one of the three bestowed horses, and the Hergest Triads refer to Lleu himself as one of the three "Red Ravagers of the Island of Britain" as well as one of the three "Golden Shoemakers".
Fort Steele in 1910 In 1863, a gold strike at the confluence of the Wild Horse and Kootenay Rivers in the East Kootenay regionMiller, p. 12 resulted in the Wild Horse Gold Rush in which between three and ten thousand men descended upon the area and the gold rush town of Fisherville was built; it had to be moved when it was discovered the town sat atop some of the richest deposits. Originally, the river (and the area) were known as "Stud Horse" by the early miners, but government officials changed it to Wild Horse. The new town's site was officially named Kootenai (though still known as Fisherville), also spelled Kootenay and Koutenais and also known as Wild Horse.

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