porker

[ US /ˈpɔɹkɝ/ ]
[ UK /pˈɔːkɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a pig fattened to provide meat
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How To Use porker In A Sentence

  • Now he's just another middle aged porker of the right.
  • Today I sing the praises of the female form, sexist old porker that I am.
  • Pigs are moving along very nicely and baconers are priced from 103-108p/kilo with lighter weight porkers getting up to 112p/kilo.
  • As a singular, it can be replaced by either of two very common words, hog and pig, as well as by the less well known, but equally proper, baconer (chiefly British usage), and porker. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol V No 2
  • She argues that the food companies have in fact been guilty of cynically manipulating the average American into becoming a porker.
  • It's a sordid story, curly as the 200-plus pound porker's corkscrew tail.
  • Pigs are just holding on, with baconers running from 88-95p/kilo and the best porkers up to 102p/kilo.
  • He's our hog expert, " producer Rick Trimm said of guide Chris Griffin, who shot the huge porker in 2004 at a hunting preserve.
  • Free-range pigs have shelters shaped as triangles or half circles, but most porkers were lurking inside; pine trees had snow plastered on the north side of their trunks and the hot sun on the south side.
  • Pigs are just holding on, with baconers running from 88-95p/kilo and the best porkers up to 102p/kilo.
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