HORSE vs KNIGHT: NOUN
- In mining: A lenticular bod of shale or old channel fillings which cuts out coal-seams.
- The researches of Ewart, Osborn, and others show the probability that the modern horse, like the dog, has been derived from several sources. Prjevalsky's horse is considered to be one of these, while two other forms are recognized—the Celtic pony and the Norse horse.
- One of the inclined timbers in a staircase which support the steps.
- Solid-hoofed herbivorous quadruped domesticated since prehistoric times
- A framework for holding wood that is being sawed
- In chess, same as knight.
- In astronomy, the constellation of Pegasus (see flying horse); also, the equine part of Sagittarius (represented as a centaur).
- A Danish silver coin of the value of 1 s. 2 d.
- A solidungulate perissodactyl mammal of the family Equidœ and genus Equus; E. caballus.
- A chessman in the shape of a horse's head; can move two squares horizontally and one vertically (or vice versa)
- Troops trained to fight on horseback
- A large hoofed mammal (Equus caballus) having a short coat, a long mane, and a long tail, domesticated since ancient times and used for riding and for drawing or carrying loads.
- An adult male horse; a stallion.
- Any of various equine mammals, such as the wild Asian species Przewalski's horse or certain extinct forms related ancestrally to the modern horse.
- A frame or device, usually with four legs, used for supporting or holding.
- A vaulting horse.
- Horsepower.
- Mounted soldiers; cavalry.
- A block of rock interrupting a vein and containing no minerals.
- A large block of displaced rock that is caught along a fault.
- Heroin.
- A padded gymnastic apparatus on legs
- The male of the horse kind, in distinction from the female or mare; a stallion or gelding.
- A body of troops serving on horseback: cavalry: in this sense a collective noun, used also as a plural: as, a regiment of horse.
- A frame, block, board, or the like, on which something is mounted or supported, or the use of which is in any way analogous to that of a horse. Compare etymology of easel.
- Specifically— A vaulting-block in a gymnasium.
- Plural In zoology, the horse family, or Equidæ; the species of the genus Equus and related genera.
- In card-playing, the knave or jack. Abbreviated knt., or in combination K. (as K. G., Knight of the Garter; K. C. B., Knight Commander of the Bath).
- A branch of the fraternity of Freemasons in the United states, with an organization based upon that of the medieval order of the same name.
- A young servant or follower; a military attendant.
- In feudal times, a man-at-arms serving on horseback and admitted to a certain military rank with special ceremonies, including an oath to protect the distressed, maintain the right, and live a stainless life.
- One on whom knighthood, a dignity next below that of baronet, is conferred by the sovereign, entitling him to be addressed as Sir; as, Sir John.
- A champion; a partisan; a lover.
- A piece used in the game of chess, usually bearing a horse's head.
- A playing card bearing the figure of a knight; the knave or jack.
- See under Carpet.
- One of the pieces in the game of chess, having usually the figure of a horse's head.
- See Hospitaler.
- One who gained his living by giving false evidence on trials, or false bail; hence, a sharper in general.
- In England, one of the representatives of a county in Parliament, in distinction from the representatives of cities and boroughs.
- Different classes of the Order of the Bath.
- A secret organization whose professed purpose is to secure and maintain the rights of workingmen as respects their relations to their employers.
- A secret order, founded in Washington, D. C., in 1864, for social and charitable purposes.
- Knights belonging to an order which, according to the legendary accounts, was instituted by the mythical King Arthur. They derived their common title from the table around which they sat on certain solemn days.
- A warrior, especially of the Middle Ages.
- Nowadays, a person on whom a knighthood has been conferred by a monarch.
- A chess piece, often in the shape of a horse's head, that is moved two squares in one direction and one at right angles to that direction in a single move, leaping over any intervening pieces.
- See Chevalier d'industrie, under Chevalier.
- A chessman in the shape of a horse's head; can move two squares horizontally and one vertically (or vice versa)
- Originally a person of noble birth trained to arms and chivalry; today in Great Britain a person honored by the sovereign for personal merit
- A medieval tenant giving military service as a mounted man-at-arms to a feudal landholder.
- A medieval gentleman-soldier, usually high-born, raised by a sovereign to privileged military status after training as a page and squire.
- A man holding a nonhereditary title conferred by a sovereign in recognition of personal merit or service to the country.
- A man belonging to an order or brotherhood.
- A defender, champion, or zealous upholder of a cause or principle.
- The devoted champion of a lady.
- A chess piece, usually in the shape of a horse's head, that can be moved two squares along a rank and one along a file or two squares along a file and one along a rank. The knight is the only piece that can jump other pieces to land on an open square.
- A boy; a youth; a young man.
- An attendant or servant; especially, a military attendant; a man-at-arms; a soldier.
- Specifically In Europe during the middle ages, a person of noble birth trained to arms and chivalry, first as page and afterward as squire to the sovereign, or to some earl, baron, or other superior lord, to whom he attached himself, and whom he was bound to follow to war on horseback.
- In Great Britain in modern times, a man upon whom a certain honorary dignity has been conferred by a sovereign as a reward of personal merit of some kind, without reference to birth or possessions, and in no way involving military service, which disappeared as a feature of knighthood with the other institutions of chivalry.
- A champion; a warrior; especially, a champion devoted to the service of another; a defender.
HORSE vs KNIGHT: ADJECTIVE
- Of or relating to a horse.
- Mounted on horses.
- Drawn or operated by a horse.
- Larger or cruder than others in the same category.
- N/A
HORSE vs KNIGHT: VERB
- Provide with a horse or horses
- Raise (someone) to knighthood
- To confer knighthood upon.
- To promote (a pawn) to a knight.
HORSE vs KNIGHT: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To be in heat. Used of a mare.
- To haul or hoist energetically.
- To provide with a horse.
- N/A
HORSE vs KNIGHT: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To raise (a person) to knighthood.
- To dub or create (one) a knight; -- done in England by the sovereign only, who taps the kneeling candidate with a sword, saying: Rise, Sir ---.
HORSE vs KNIGHT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- An obsolete form of hoarse.
- A chessman shaped to resemble the head of a horse
- To hang (as skins) over a wooden horse or stand.
- In calking, to embed firmly in the seams of a ship, as oakum, with a horsing-iron and a mallet: often with up.
- To charge for work before it is executed.
- To get on horseback; mount or ride on a horse.
- To make out or learn by means of a translation or other extrinsic aid: as, to horse a lesson in Virgil.
- . Nautical, to “ride” hard; drive or urge at work unfairly or tyrannically: as, to horse a ship's crew.
- To mount on another's back preparatory to flogging.
- To mount or place on or as on the back of a horse; set on horseback; hence, to take on one's own back.
- To cover: said of the male.
- To sit astride; bestride.
- To provide with a horse; supply horses for, as a body of cavalry, etc.
- (idiom) (the horse's mouth) A source of information regarded as original or unimpeachable.
- (idiom) (hold (one's) horses) To restrain oneself.
- (idiom) (be/get) To be or become disdainful, superior, or conceited.
- (idiom) (beat/flog) To dwell tiresomely on a matter that has already been decided.
- (idiom) (a horse of another/a different) Another matter entirely; something else.
- (idiom) (beat/flog) To continue to pursue a cause that has no hope of success.
- To dub or create a knight; confer the honor of knighthood upon. The ceremony is regularly performed by touching the person on whom the dignity is conferred with a sword as he kneels. See accolade, 1.
- A chessman shaped to resemble the head of a horse
HORSE vs KNIGHT: RELATED WORDS
- Racehorse, H, Equus caballus, Diacetyl morphine, Horse cavalry, Junk, Smack, Heroin, Shit, Buck, Sawbuck, Scag, Sawhorse, Knight, Cavalry
- Rider, Sir, Horseman, Gentleman, Esquire, Horseback, Samurai, Persia, Caballero, Hero, Warrior, Chevalier, Prince, Dub, Horse
HORSE vs KNIGHT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Jockey, Mare, Horseman, Equine, Stallion, Racehorse, Junk, Smack, Heroin, Shit, Buck, Sawbuck, Sawhorse, Knight, Cavalry
- Rider, Sir, Horseman, Gentleman, Esquire, Horseback, Samurai, Persia, Caballero, Hero, Warrior, Chevalier, Prince, Dub, Horse
HORSE vs KNIGHT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Examples include a bicycle, horse and buggy, horse and rider, etc.
- How many times a horse is Breezed really depends on the trainer and the horse.
- Fixed an issue where horse gear was not visible if the horse is connected to a wagon.
- Betting on a horse to show pays out if the horse finishes third or better.
- This includes discarding any horse manure that the leased horse may leave anywhere on thefacilities.
- This magnificent white horse was standing at attention, much like a Calvary horse would.
- Kilgore serves as a horse leader, guiding and directing the horse while patients ride.
- You can train and Awaken the horse with Gula at Stonetail Horse Ranch.
- Or the number of horse shows per month in which your horse competes?
- Would you like to discuss a lease horse, a sale horse, or general horse needs?
- Black Knight here as a note regarding Black Knight weapons.
- Questoris Knight Styrix and sometimes the rare Questoris Knight Magaera patterns.
- She works well with axes, which makes her an excellent tank character who can be a Fortress Knight or Great Knight.
- According to Hollow Knight developer Team Cherry, Silksong originally began as DLC for Hollow Knight.
- Batman: Arkham Knight latest version: Take the streets of Gotham back from the Knight.
- Meanwhile, the third Knight kills the other Knight who had been chasing thedamsel.
- New items preferred Path build, Oathkeeper is like Holy Knight or Dark Knight character Class that in.
- Ask the Old Knight how you can become a Knight.
- BRYAN DAVID KNIGHT SON OF DAVID KNIGHT AND ANNE GRAHAM KNIGHT; ANTHONY BRETT BUTLER SON OF MR.
- See more ideas about knight, knight on horse, medieval knight.
HORSE vs KNIGHT: QUESTIONS
- How much does a Schleich horse cost at the Horse Club?
- What are the odds of a horse winning at horse racing?
- What did Rosie the horse have to do with horse racing?
- What happens to Colonel Potter's horse in the Colonels horse?
- How accurate is a horse's overall time in horse racing?
- How to take care of your horse in horse riding Tales?
- How do you find the right horse halter for your horse?
- What happened to Grace's horse in the Horse Whisperer?
- What are the best horse stall doors for your horse?
- What happened to Godfrey's horse in the Horse Whisperer?
- Is Blade Knight better than Sword Knight in Kirby Quest?
- Is Plague Knight ahead of Shovel Knight in the game?
- Why did Wilton Knight change his mind about Michael Knight?
- What does Kari Knight give Mr Knight at his wedding?
- How much did Phil Knight donate to the Knight Foundation?
- Where do the 3 certainties come from Knight v Knight?
- What happened to Randy Knight of Knight Transportation?
- What are the Smith-Knight and Rayleigh-Knight prizes?
- What happened to Phil Knight and Penny Knight House?
- Is Meta Knight Stronger Than Sword Knight and Blade Knight?