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saddle-sore

ADJECTIVE
  1. (of a rider) sore after riding a horse

How To Use saddle-sore In A Sentence

  • Having cycled out of Sheffield on Saturday, the team are due to arrive at Trafalgar Square today? via Nottingham, Loughborough, Leicester, Stratford, Oxford and Reading? then to finish at Earl's Court, the 2012 volleyball venue, saddle-sore, but undaunted. London 2012 Olympics: Volleyball players on their bikes to raise cash
  • It tells the story of a band of saddle-sore nomads, headed by Harry Collings who, weary of a life of bad trouble, returns to Collings's farm.
  • But we know you like any song about a saddle-sore cowpoke riding into a saloon town of soakin 'wet girls to get some time in the rack with his four-bit hooker. Don Parker: Aerosmith, Rep. Cantor, Hookers, and Hypocrisy
  • Yet despite being saddle-sore (I refused to use a specially inflatable seat cover printed with Dennis the Menace's face) and walking like John Wayne, I actually started to enjoy my regular daily perambulations.
  • The dusty and saddle-sore mage walked slowly toward the gates, placing his feet carefully and using his chaos-order senses to guide him. Colors of Chaos
  • They were weary and saddle-sore; their horses were spent.
  • Around 2500 years ago, it helped saddle-sore warriors get over their aches and pains, but now urban warriors are turning to the technique, to help them cope with life in the city.
  • But even then it was only to take to the woods on foot, groping through the night with your hand at one man's belt while another held you behind, trying for dear life not to thrash about like a mad bear in a cane-break, gripping your rifle and gritting your teeth against the pain of saddle-sore buttocks. Isabelle
  • This morning was the long ride - 80k - but I felt much more comfortable, if a little saddle-sore. Journal for 14 December 2000
  • I get off him, surprised to find that I'm not the least bit saddle-sore.
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