courser
IPA: kˈɔrsɝ
noun
- A dog used for coursing.
- A hunter who practises coursing.
- A swift horse; a racehorse or a charger.
- Any of several species of terrestrial bird in the genera Cursorius or Rhinoptilus of the family Glareolidae.
- A stone used in building a course.
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Examples of "courser" in Sentences
- He was astride his white courser.
- Also decapitalized Rouncey, Destrier, Courser, etc.
- Instead, a special breed called a courser would be used.
- Little is known about Lucina Courser Broadwell's early life.
- She was the second ship of the U.S. Navy to be named 'Courser'.
- Of courser, that is exactly what every government should be doing.
- It is an unmistakable compact courser, with two brown breast bands.
- Courser was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 1 November 1959.
- Several species of bird including the rare Jerdon's Courser carry his name.
- I just fiddled a bit with the definitions of courser, rouncey, and destrier.
- Since I didn't want to bury myself in the kitchen all night, I felt a three-courser would suffice.
- Now she was tolerating him too much, crabby on account of his art, using courser language, waxing indifferent.
- Jaime Lannister trotted onto the field on a chestnut courser with a tawny mane, clad in golden armor that flashed and glittered in the sun.
- Perhaps this simplicity eluded me when attempting to prepare a complex three-courser that would speak to Norman Dubie's poetic flights of fancy.
- But if you're looking to start the party fashionably early (We always are), Ammo gets the ball rolling on Sunday, July 11th with a notable three-courser.
- Identifying megadiverse countries instead of regions is spatially courser and concentrates biodiversity over a larger percentage of the globe: collectively the 17 nations cover about 40 percent of the world's non-glacial land area.
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