释义 |
Definition of kine in English: kineplural noun kʌɪnkīn archaic Cows collectively. 〈古〉牛 总称 the lowing kine came home at twilight Example sentencesExamples - In addition, such c/k pairs arose as cat and kitten, cow and kine.
- The twelfth-century Metrical Dinshenchas also contain a place name stanza about Howth which mentions ‘seven hundred kine, red eared, pure white.’
- Like Virgil's, Horace's garden had its vines, olives, bees and kine.
- Dispossessed, deprived, discriminated against, treated as kine rather than kin, the black and coloured people of that supremely beautiful and otherwise fulsomely promising land had no weapons to fight back with - except themselves.
- The crops of Egypt withered in the fields and the kine died in the pasture, and the children of Egypt went hungry; their ribs and bones stuck out like those of corpses.
Rhymesalign, assign, benign, brine, chine, cline, combine, condign, confine, consign, dine, divine, dyne, enshrine, entwine, fine, frontline, hardline, interline, intertwine, Klein, line, Main, malign, mine, moline, nine, on-line, opine, outshine, pine, Rhein, Rhine, shine, shrine, sign, sine, spine, spline, stein, Strine, swine, syne, thine, tine, trine, twine, Tyne, underline, undermine, vine, whine, wine Definition of kine in US English: kineplural nounkīn archaic Cows collectively. 〈古〉牛 总称 the lowing kine came home at twilight Example sentencesExamples - The twelfth-century Metrical Dinshenchas also contain a place name stanza about Howth which mentions ‘seven hundred kine, red eared, pure white.’
- In addition, such c/k pairs arose as cat and kitten, cow and kine.
- Like Virgil's, Horace's garden had its vines, olives, bees and kine.
- Dispossessed, deprived, discriminated against, treated as kine rather than kin, the black and coloured people of that supremely beautiful and otherwise fulsomely promising land had no weapons to fight back with - except themselves.
- The crops of Egypt withered in the fields and the kine died in the pasture, and the children of Egypt went hungry; their ribs and bones stuck out like those of corpses.
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