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word refers hindquarters
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Equine conformation
The "hip" refers to the line running from the ishium of the pelvis (point of the hip) to the point of the buttock. ... Conformation of the Hindquarters and Hips -
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Purple
Curple is a word out of Scotland, which refers to the hindquarters of a horse. -
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Cayuse (horse)
In British Columbia, the variant word cayoosh refers to a particular breed of mountain pony with shorter legs and large hindquarters, typically also of Indian husbandry. -
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Canter
Collected canter: an extremely engaged, collected gait (collection refers to having the horse's balance shifted backward towards its hind legs, with more weight taken by the hindquarters). ... All articles with unsourced statements -
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Buttocks
Baboon hindquarters illustrating ischial callosities ... six; in military terminology, particularly in the U.S. Navy, it refers to the term "six o'clock", i. e. a point directly behind the referenced person. -
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Ashkenazi Jews
This is not because of different interpretations of the law; rather, slaughterhouses could not find adequate skills for correct removal of the sciatic nerve and found it more economical to separate the hindquarters and sell them as non-kosher meat. ... The term Ashkenazi also refers to the nusach Ashkenaz (Hebrew, "liturgical tradition", or rite) used by Ashkenazi Jews in their Siddur (prayer book). -
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Donkey
An animal which may look like a zebra-donkey hybrid because of its distinctly striped hindquarters and hind legs is the okapi, which has no relationship to either of those species. ... In Arabic, حمار (ḥimar), meaning "donkey", is a derogatory term that refers to someone of very limited intelligence. -
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Dressage
Rhythm refers to the sequence of the footfalls, which should only include the pure walk, pure trot, and pure canter. ... When a horse collects, he naturally takes more of his weight onto his hindquarters. -
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Forehand (horse)
The term forehand refers to the front half of a horse's body. ... Horses that are built "downhill," with their hindquarters especially high, will be harder to collect. -
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Attitude (heraldry)
The terms "guardant" (or rarely "gardant") and "erect" are used to modify each attitude. ... Sejant or sejeant (Middle French: seant, "sitting"), and in rare cases seiant, refers to the attitude where the beast is seated on its hindquarters with its forepaws placed in front and its head erect; a sejant beast usually faces sinister.
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word refers hindquarters