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Word Meanings - BULLOCK - Book Publishers vocabulary database

1. A young bull, or any male of the ox kind. Take thy father's young bullock, even the second bullock of seven years old. Judges vi. 25. 2. An ox, steer, or stag.

Related words: (words related to BULLOCK)

  • SECOND
    1. Immediately following the first; next to the first in order of place or time; hence, occuring again; another; other. And he slept and dreamed the second time. Gen. xli. 5. 2. Next to the first in value, power, excellence, dignity,
  • YOUNGISH
    Somewhat young. Tatler.
  • FATHER-LASHER
    A European marine fish , allied to the sculpin; -- called also lucky proach.
  • SEVENNIGHT
    A week; any period of seven consecutive days and nights. See Sennight.
  • SEVEN
    1. The number greater by one than six; seven units or objects. Of every beast, and bird, and insect small, Game sevens and pairs. Milton. 2. A symbol representing seven units, as 7, or vii.
  • YOUNG
    , , AS. geong; akin to OFries. iung, iong, D. joing, OS., OHG., & G. jung, Icel. ungr, Sw. & Dan. ung, Goth. juggs, Lith. jaunas, Russ. iunuii, L. juvencus, juvenis, Skr. juva, juven. Junior, Juniper, 1. Not long born; still in the first part of
  • YOUNGTH
    Youth. Youngth is a bubble blown up with breath. Spenser.
  • STEER
    A young male of the ox kind; especially, a common ox; a castrated taurine male from two to four years old. See the Note under Ox. (more info) OHG. stior, Icel. stjorr, , Sw. tjur, Dan. tyr, Goth. stiur, Russ. tur', Pol. tur, Ir. & Gael. tarbh,
  • YOUNGNESS
    The quality or state of being young.
  • FATHERLESSNESS
    The state of being without a father.
  • FATHER
    1. To make one's self the father of; to beget. Cowards father cowards, and base things sire base. Shak. 2. To take as one's own child; to adopt; hence, to assume as one's own work; to acknowledge one's self author of or responsible for
  • SECOND-CLASS
    Of the rank or degree below the best highest; inferior; second- rate; as, a second-class house; a second-class passage.
  • SEVENFOLD
    Repeated seven times; having seven thicknesses; increased to seven times the size or amount. "Sevenfold rage." Milton.
  • BULLOCK'S-EYE
    See 3
  • YOUNG ONE
    A young human being; a child; also, a young animal, as a colt.
  • FATHERLAND
    One's native land; the native land of one's fathers or ancestors.
  • SECONDER
    One who seconds or supports what another attempts, affirms, moves, or proposes; as, the seconder of an enterprise or of a motion.
  • SECONDLY
    In the second place.
  • SEVENTIETH
    1. Next in order after the sixty-ninth; as, a man in the seventieth year of his age. 2. Constituting or being one of seventy equal parts.
  • FATHER-IN-LAW
    The father of one's husband or wife; -- correlative to son-in- law and daughter-in-law. Note: A man who marries a woman having children already, is sometimes, though erroneously, called their father-in-law.
  • YOUNGLY
    Like a young person or thing; young; youthful. Shak.
  • GREAT-GRANDFATHER
    The father of one's grandfather or grandmother.
  • UNSEVEN
    To render other than seven; to make to be no longer seven. "To unseven the sacraments of the church of Rome." Fuller.
  • GODFATHER
    A man who becomes sponsor for a child at baptism, and makes himself a surety for its Christian training and instruction. There shall be for every Male-child to be baptized, when they can be had, two Godfathers and one Godmother; and for

 

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