[
UK
/kˈaʊhænd/
]
NOUN
- a hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horseback
How To Use cowhand In A Sentence
- Once in the saloon, Val overheard two cowhands discussing the matter.
- As it was, the cowhand's intrusion gave him the excuse to punch someone.
- The town drunk was a battered old sot of a cowhand whose horse carried him home, passed out in the saddle, on Saturday nights.
- It remains for other scholars to analyze more systematically the similarities and differences among western cowhands.
- Allen never produces convincing evidence for equating rodeo performers with real working cowhands.
- But then both heard the war cry of a few of the braves as well as whoops from the cowhands with resounding bullets.
- The boy was a skinny thing, more of a pretty boy than a cowhand, but he was willing to learn about the ranch.
- Female cowhands numbered far fewer but were still among the populace.
- Latham said, ‘Well, he's the best cowhand I've ever had ride for me.’
- Born in Wigan and apprenticed in London, he failed in trade, and from 1643 worked as a cowhand in Surrey.