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词汇 vaquero
释义

Definition of vaquero in English:

vaquero

nounPlural vaqueros vəˈkɛːrəʊväˈkerō
  • (in Spanish-speaking parts of the US) a cowboy; a cattle driver.

    (美国西班牙语地区)牛仔;牧牛人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘A good horseman can ride any horse and it's the same with dancing,’ said the vaqueros and it was true.
    • On his way to Montana, he traps beaver with Jim Bridger, pans for gold in Colorado, visits with Kit Carson in New Mexico, and finds himself in most desperate situations with Navajos, Comanches, Apaches, and Mexican vaqueros.
    • Many of today's trainers use similar training methods and ride with the same style of equipment as used by those gifted vaqueros.
    • Kids, dressed up as little vaqueros, imitated and practiced the steps that the grown-ups were dancing.
    • The lore of the gun tells us that back in the 19th Century, the Mexican vaquero, much like the American cowboy, was an independent and self-reliant sort who often made it a point to carry a handgun.
    • The American cowboy has roots that directly trace back to the Mexican vaqueros, and Arizona itself has very strong Spanish ties.
    • What started in the mid-1800s on Southern California's huge ranchos as a means of feeding a large number of vaqueros continues every weekend on portable barbecues along Santa Maria's main street, Broadway.
    • Two years later the king requested that three California mission vaqueros come to Hawai'i to teach Hawaiians how to handle cattle from horseback.
    • Even so, I was surprised to find Spanish vaqueros - cowboys - in the western province of Extremadura, were still herding cattle on horseback.
    • The new Rodeo almost passes for a literal bucking bronco roundup, jam-packed with so many vaqueros that I feel naked without a Mexican-style cowboy hat of my own.
    • He wanted his men to ride like Comanches, and he borrowed some techniques and equipment from Mexican vaqueros.
    • Today's art of cowboying is the same as it was 150 years ago, when cowboys in the Spanish vaquero tradition roamed mountain ranges and low-slung plains.
    • At Lethem on the Brazilian frontier there's a big rodeo every Easter, attended by many rugged vaqueros from both sides of the border.
    • Cody is again dressed in buckskins instead of his vaquero outfit.
    • Through the support of a Corporate Partner family, the association works to keep the vaquero tradition alive in today's equine industry.
    • As cattle ranching spread northward into California and Texas, Americans adopted the tools and techniques of the vaquero.
    • De Yong took note of these changes, and in September 1926 he moved to the California vaquero country near Santa Barbara to study bronze casting with western artist Ed Borein.
    • He had little trouble hazing his quarry back toward the bunch that some vaqueros, including Cipriano, were keeping track of.

Origin

Spanish, from vaca 'cow'.

Definition of vaquero in US English:

vaquero

nounväˈkerō
  • (in Spanish-speaking parts of the US) a cowboy; a cattle driver.

    (美国西班牙语地区)牛仔;牧牛人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Even so, I was surprised to find Spanish vaqueros - cowboys - in the western province of Extremadura, were still herding cattle on horseback.
    • The new Rodeo almost passes for a literal bucking bronco roundup, jam-packed with so many vaqueros that I feel naked without a Mexican-style cowboy hat of my own.
    • Today's art of cowboying is the same as it was 150 years ago, when cowboys in the Spanish vaquero tradition roamed mountain ranges and low-slung plains.
    • The lore of the gun tells us that back in the 19th Century, the Mexican vaquero, much like the American cowboy, was an independent and self-reliant sort who often made it a point to carry a handgun.
    • Cody is again dressed in buckskins instead of his vaquero outfit.
    • ‘A good horseman can ride any horse and it's the same with dancing,’ said the vaqueros and it was true.
    • Two years later the king requested that three California mission vaqueros come to Hawai'i to teach Hawaiians how to handle cattle from horseback.
    • As cattle ranching spread northward into California and Texas, Americans adopted the tools and techniques of the vaquero.
    • At Lethem on the Brazilian frontier there's a big rodeo every Easter, attended by many rugged vaqueros from both sides of the border.
    • On his way to Montana, he traps beaver with Jim Bridger, pans for gold in Colorado, visits with Kit Carson in New Mexico, and finds himself in most desperate situations with Navajos, Comanches, Apaches, and Mexican vaqueros.
    • He had little trouble hazing his quarry back toward the bunch that some vaqueros, including Cipriano, were keeping track of.
    • De Yong took note of these changes, and in September 1926 he moved to the California vaquero country near Santa Barbara to study bronze casting with western artist Ed Borein.
    • Many of today's trainers use similar training methods and ride with the same style of equipment as used by those gifted vaqueros.
    • Through the support of a Corporate Partner family, the association works to keep the vaquero tradition alive in today's equine industry.
    • He wanted his men to ride like Comanches, and he borrowed some techniques and equipment from Mexican vaqueros.
    • The American cowboy has roots that directly trace back to the Mexican vaqueros, and Arizona itself has very strong Spanish ties.
    • What started in the mid-1800s on Southern California's huge ranchos as a means of feeding a large number of vaqueros continues every weekend on portable barbecues along Santa Maria's main street, Broadway.
    • Kids, dressed up as little vaqueros, imitated and practiced the steps that the grown-ups were dancing.

Origin

Spanish, from vaca ‘cow’.

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