Litter+of+pigs

  • 11farrow — I far•row [[t]ˈfær oʊ[/t]] n. 1) ahb. a litter of pigs 2) ahb. (of swine) to bring forth (young) 3) ahb. to produce a litter of pigs • Etymology: bef. 900; ME farwen (v.), der. of OE fearh pig, c. OHG farah, L porcus II far•row [[t]ˈfær oʊ[/t]]… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 12farrow — I. /ˈfæroʊ / (say faroh) noun 1. a litter of pigs. –verb (t) 2. (of swine) to bring forth (young). –verb (i) 3. to produce a litter of pigs. {Middle English far, Old English fearh, distantly related to Latin porcus} II. /ˈfæroʊ / (say faroh) …

  • 13farrow — farrow1 [far′ō] n. [altered (after v.) < OE fearh, young pig < IE * pork̑os, pig (< base * perk̑ , to root up, dig) > L porcus, PORK, MIr orc] 1. Obs. a young pig 2. a litter of pigs vt., vi. [ME farwen] to give birth to (a litt …

    English World dictionary

  • 14farrow — n. & v. n. 1 a litter of pigs. 2 the birth of a litter. v.tr. (also absol.) (of a sow) produce (pigs). Etymology: OE fearh, faeligrh pig f. WG …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 15far|row — far|row1 «FAR oh», noun, verb. –n. 1. a litter of pigs. 2. Obsolete. a young pig. –v.t., v.i. to give birth to (a litter of pigs). ╂[Old English fearh] far|row2 «FAR oh», adjective. Scottish. (of cows) not calving in a certain year or season.… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 16Charlotte's Web (1973 film) — Charlotte s Web Original theatrical release poster …

    Wikipedia

  • 17Far — Far, n. [See {Farrow}.] (Zo[ o]l.) A young pig, or a litter of pigs. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 18Farrow — Far row (f[a^]r r[ o]), n. [AS. fearh a little pig; a akin to OHG. farh, farah, pig, dim. farheli little pig, G. fercel, D. varken pig, Lith. parszas OIr. orc, L. porcus, Gr. po rkos. Cf. {Pork}.] A litter of pigs. Shak. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 19Pork — Pork, n. [F. porc, L. porcus hog, pig. See {Farrow} a litter of pigs, and cf. {Porcelain}, {Porpoise}.] The flesh of swine, fresh or salted, used for food. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 20runt — noun Etymology: origin unknown Date: 1501 1. chiefly Scottish a hardened stalk or stem of a plant 2. an animal unusually small of its kind; especially the smallest of a litter of pigs 3. a person of small stature • runtiness noun • runtish… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary