Get Free Checker
[ UK /bˈʌkɐɹˌuː/ ]
NOUN
  1. local names for a cowboy (`vaquero' is used especially in southwestern and central Texas and `buckaroo' is used especially in California)

How To Use buckaroo In A Sentence

  • Last week, a bronze-skinned buckaroo, with a flashing red neckerchief above his blue shirt, with shining leather chaparejos and crimson saddle-blanket, dashed up from a Western skyline on a snorting, piebald cow-pony.
  • Or bummed out, or bumped off, or some bumptious buckaroo had burst your bubble.
  • One of the main tasks of the buckaroo is the roundup--locating the cattle on the range and driving them back to the ranch.
  • Their conclusion unequivocally states that vaqueros, cowboys, and buckaroos are ‘at heart… all the same, they do their work a little differently, they dress a little differently, but they are the same’.
  • The value of the buckaroo is a function of what the students have to do to earn a buckaroo from the UMKC work doing one hour of community service; Warren Mosler: The UMKC Buckaroo: A Currency Model for World Prosperity
  • The buckaroo is a simple case of a public monopoly; Warren Mosler: The UMKC Buckaroo: A Currency Model for World Prosperity
  • Josh Donen of Buckaroo Entertainment will co-produce from a screenplay by Siavash Farahani. Archive 2010-02-01
  • It's called the buckaroo, named in sync with the school mascot, the kangaroo. Warren Mosler: The UMKC Buckaroo: A Currency Model for World Prosperity
  • Some buckaroos will protest that the list is unfair to Westerns because it reflects only present-day movie tastes.
  • This buckaroo is headed back to halls of learning. Think Progress » Gregg: Not ‘A Lot Of People’ Would ‘Really Care’ If Democrats Use Reconciliation To Finish Health Care
View all