[
US
/ˈmu/
]
[ UK /mˈuː/ ]
[ UK /mˈuː/ ]
NOUN
- the sound made by a cow or bull
VERB
- make a low noise, characteristic of bovines
How To Use moo In A Sentence
- He specialized in moonlit and winter scenes, usually including a sheet of water and sometimes also involving the light of a fire, and he also painted sunsets and views at dawn or twilight.
- Why be all miffy and hissy and in a bitch-slapping mood guys, about not being in the military when you can do the work you like in prisons and police forces? See, it's not all about the election today.
- Simply smooth a little on your face at night, lie back and say goodbye to dull and lifeless skin. The Sun
- On the moor, we crossed becks bridged by railway sleepers and bulging with pondweed and we met a couple of cyclists.
- We lapped the track a few times at a walk, trot and canter and the horse went through it pretty smoothly.
- The play is a little overlong and would benefit from cuts, but each scene is interesting and changes are smoothly executed.
- It takes about eight seconds for a pair of lobsters to copulate; it takes a lot longer to get them into the mood.
- A Scottish moor long bore the reputation for being haunted by a phantom flock of sheep, which were always heard "baaing" plaintively before a big storm. Animal Ghosts Or, Animal Hauntings and the Hereafter
- Having a smooth bore . Use of a gun barrel.
- They seemed to be in a serious mood, perhaps brooding on the deteriorating human behaviour that cannot see that he is cutting the same very branch that he is sitting on.