释义 |
Definition of pinto in English: pintoadjective ˈpɪntəʊˈpɪntoʊ North American Piebald. 有花斑的,杂色的 Example sentencesExamples - He was very feisty and reminded Kris greatly of Lucky, her pinto little colt.
- Kris clicked a lead onto his halter, the young pinto thoroughbred following behind Kris sleepily.
- I liked to watch my younger cousin, Angie, barrel race her pinto pony, Carolina.
- My first horse was a little pinto pony named King, and he did from everything from chase us around and bite us to carry us down the road on his back in carts.
- Across the alley from the Alamo lived a pinto pony and a Navajo who sang a sort of Indian Hideho.
- ‘There has been a great increase in the number of pinto breeders in the US and I feel the trend will spill over into this country,’ Miles said.
- At a village on the edge of the Enchanted Woods, Phineas Brock bought lunch that afternoon and purchased a roan pinto stallion named Meadowlark because he had a lucky pink hoof.
- Joe pulled up the pinto mare and touched the brim of his hat.
- As we passed a ranch with several pinto ponies in the corral, it didn't require much on my part to envision that the Comanches were not gone, the Longhorns were not gone, the drovers, the outlaws, the gunfighters - none of them were gone.
- The storm front had passed on through, fading, having delivered just enough rain to soak Joe and the pinto mare through to the skin.
- Conjuring visions of sitting astride a pinto pony, an octagon-barreled rifle across the saddle, a gentle breeze blowing across the prairie grass, this gun embodies the frontier spirit.
- I found a real beauty - and cheap - a pinto colt with mismatched eyes: one dark, one lunatic blue.
Synonyms speckled, blotched, blotchy, spotted, spotty, dotted, streaked, streaky, mottled, marbled, flecked, freckled, stippled, piebald, skewbald, pied, brindled, brindle, tabby, marled
nounPlural pintos ˈpɪntəʊˈpɪntoʊ North American A piebald horse. 花马,杂色马 Example sentencesExamples - A tall gray man with piercing eyes and a sternly lined face remained firmly seated in the pinto's saddle, while four winged men, wearing clothing not too much unlike ploughmen's attire, circled the deck.
- Off to one side, something skittered away and Joe felt more than saw that Cochise turned to look in that direction but then the pinto stiffened and Joe instinctively pulled the horse to a stop there in the center of the road.
- Adam muttered darkly under his breath about what he was going to do to a younger brother and shoved Sport after the quickly dwindling form of the pinto.
- Zef's cannon was to their left with two pintos tied to a close by shrub.
- He had made a noise, and one of the horses, a beautiful dark chestnut and white pinto, came running over.
- He angled Buck back around and without leaving the saddle, reached over and loosened the pinto's reins.
- Someone needs to put this pinto out to pasture pronto.
- Altair held on tightly, his horse grunting beneath him, and urged him forward, causing the pinto to bellow angrily.
- Joe unwrapped Cochise's reins from the hitching rail and backed the pinto out into the street, where he vaulted into the saddle.
- Adam turned from his brother and continued back up the slope to where his horse now grazed with his brother's pinto.
- He patted the pinto's neck and glanced over at the saddle.
- A painted horse is a quarter horse with colour, not like piebald or a pinto.
- Frank McCay watched as Joe Cartwright wheeled his pinto around and headed for the Ponderosa.
- On the other side were three sleek horses, tall, with shining coats, chestnut, black, and a pinto, golden-blonde and black.
- Where you from that they don't have bays and chestnuts, only pintos?
- Chika picked her mare, a dainty pinto named Lassi and slipped a bridle and saddle on the mare.
- A roan pinto snapped to, looked at her a long, close moment before succumbing to a yawn.
- The pinto was different, taller and leaner with more black in his coat, but he had that same short-bodied, chunky look that Joe Cartwright favoured.
- He slowed the pinto to a walk, and tried to settle the horse down.
- It was a beautiful creature and as I moved to the switchback to enter the corral, the pinto began to crib on the fencing.
OriginMid 19th century: from Spanish, literally 'mottled', based on Latin pictus, past participle of pingere 'to paint'. Definition of pinto in US English: pintoadjectiveˈpɪntoʊˈpintō North American Piebald. 有花斑的,杂色的 Example sentencesExamples - The storm front had passed on through, fading, having delivered just enough rain to soak Joe and the pinto mare through to the skin.
- My first horse was a little pinto pony named King, and he did from everything from chase us around and bite us to carry us down the road on his back in carts.
- ‘There has been a great increase in the number of pinto breeders in the US and I feel the trend will spill over into this country,’ Miles said.
- Joe pulled up the pinto mare and touched the brim of his hat.
- He was very feisty and reminded Kris greatly of Lucky, her pinto little colt.
- I found a real beauty - and cheap - a pinto colt with mismatched eyes: one dark, one lunatic blue.
- Kris clicked a lead onto his halter, the young pinto thoroughbred following behind Kris sleepily.
- As we passed a ranch with several pinto ponies in the corral, it didn't require much on my part to envision that the Comanches were not gone, the Longhorns were not gone, the drovers, the outlaws, the gunfighters - none of them were gone.
- I liked to watch my younger cousin, Angie, barrel race her pinto pony, Carolina.
- Across the alley from the Alamo lived a pinto pony and a Navajo who sang a sort of Indian Hideho.
- Conjuring visions of sitting astride a pinto pony, an octagon-barreled rifle across the saddle, a gentle breeze blowing across the prairie grass, this gun embodies the frontier spirit.
- At a village on the edge of the Enchanted Woods, Phineas Brock bought lunch that afternoon and purchased a roan pinto stallion named Meadowlark because he had a lucky pink hoof.
Synonyms speckled, blotched, blotchy, spotted, spotty, dotted, streaked, streaky, mottled, marbled, flecked, freckled, stippled, piebald, skewbald, pied, brindled, brindle, tabby, marled
nounˈpɪntoʊˈpintō North American A piebald horse. 花马,杂色马 Example sentencesExamples - Adam muttered darkly under his breath about what he was going to do to a younger brother and shoved Sport after the quickly dwindling form of the pinto.
- He slowed the pinto to a walk, and tried to settle the horse down.
- It was a beautiful creature and as I moved to the switchback to enter the corral, the pinto began to crib on the fencing.
- Someone needs to put this pinto out to pasture pronto.
- Zef's cannon was to their left with two pintos tied to a close by shrub.
- The pinto was different, taller and leaner with more black in his coat, but he had that same short-bodied, chunky look that Joe Cartwright favoured.
- On the other side were three sleek horses, tall, with shining coats, chestnut, black, and a pinto, golden-blonde and black.
- Adam turned from his brother and continued back up the slope to where his horse now grazed with his brother's pinto.
- He had made a noise, and one of the horses, a beautiful dark chestnut and white pinto, came running over.
- He angled Buck back around and without leaving the saddle, reached over and loosened the pinto's reins.
- Where you from that they don't have bays and chestnuts, only pintos?
- A painted horse is a quarter horse with colour, not like piebald or a pinto.
- Altair held on tightly, his horse grunting beneath him, and urged him forward, causing the pinto to bellow angrily.
- A tall gray man with piercing eyes and a sternly lined face remained firmly seated in the pinto's saddle, while four winged men, wearing clothing not too much unlike ploughmen's attire, circled the deck.
- He patted the pinto's neck and glanced over at the saddle.
- Frank McCay watched as Joe Cartwright wheeled his pinto around and headed for the Ponderosa.
- Chika picked her mare, a dainty pinto named Lassi and slipped a bridle and saddle on the mare.
- Joe unwrapped Cochise's reins from the hitching rail and backed the pinto out into the street, where he vaulted into the saddle.
- Off to one side, something skittered away and Joe felt more than saw that Cochise turned to look in that direction but then the pinto stiffened and Joe instinctively pulled the horse to a stop there in the center of the road.
- A roan pinto snapped to, looked at her a long, close moment before succumbing to a yawn.
OriginMid 19th century: from Spanish, literally ‘mottled’, based on Latin pictus, past participle of pingere ‘to paint’. |