different between horses vs cribbing

horses

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?h?rs?s/, /?h?rs?z/

Noun

horses

  1. plural of horse
  2. (slang) horsepower
    • 1979, Al Greenwood and Lou Gramm, "Rev on the Red Line" from Head Games:
      I got four hundred horses tucked under the hood.
    • 1994, Blood (The X-Files)
      This is a diagnostic test of your engine. You're supposed to have an output of a hundred and sixty-eight horses at sixty-two hundred R.P.M.s. You're nowhere near that.

Verb

horses

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of horse

Anagrams

  • hosers, shoers, shores

horses From the web:

  • what horses are running in the preakness
  • what horses are running in the kentucky derby
  • what horses eat
  • what horses are running in the preakness 2020
  • what horses won the triple crown
  • what horses are racing today
  • what horses are used for racing
  • what horses are running in the breeders cup


cribbing

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?k??b??/
  • Rhymes: -?b??

Verb

cribbing

  1. present participle of crib

Noun

cribbing (countable and uncountable, plural cribbings)

  1. The members used to build a (structural) crib, usually of timbers or logs, but also of concrete, steel or even plastic; cribwork.
  2. As a whole, the heavy structure built to support an existing structure from underneath, as with a mineshaft or when raising a building off its foundation, as for moving to another location,
    After the Loma Prieta earthquake, they had to put cribbing under portions of San Francisco's Embarcadero Freeway, for fear it would collapse.
    • US Army Corps of Engineers site
      If the structure is to be raised in place without relocation, once it is raised to the desired elevation the jacks are replaced with timber cribbing.
  3. The cribbing used to support anything from below or on a side, as with a retaining wall, or to prop up a piece of heavy machinery.
  4. (ethology, equestrianism) A self-injurious tendency of certain horses to swallow air while slobbering and biting onto objects in and about their enclosure; cribbing and windsucking are regarded as equine forms of obsessive-compulsive disorder.
  5. An act of plagiarism.
    • 1976, Bernice Rose, Museum of Modern Art (New York, N.Y.), Drawing Now (issue 2, page 19)
      [] cribbings from Leonardo's notebooks []

Translations

cribbing From the web:

  • what's cribbing in horses
  • cribbing meaning
  • what cribbing collars
  • cribbing what does mean
  • what is cribbing in construction
  • what causes cribbing in horses
  • what does cribbing do to a horse
  • what are cribbing spikes
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