All 11 Uses
foal
in
Seabiscuit, by Hillenbrand
(Auto-generated)
- Noah, the foaling groom at Claiborne, had summed it up about as well as anyone when he pulled Seabiscuit into the world: "Runty little thing."†
Chpt 1.3
- Curiously, Hard Tack appeared to be stamping his foals in a mold that was the polar opposite of his own.†
Chpt 1.3
- Seabiscuit had been a very late foal, born at the end of May 1933, but in January 1935, half a year short of his actual birthday, he was deemed a two-year-old, officially eligible to race.†
Chpt 1.3 *
- A regally bred mare named Brushup had foaled a near-black colt, a son of Man o' War, and they couldn't take their eyes off of him.†
Chpt 2.10
- The foal grew up and Riddle named him War Admiral.†
Chpt 2.10
- He proudly introduced everyone to Seabiscuit's first foal, still wobbling on new legs.†
Chpt Epil.
- The foal delighted Pollard in particular; he was a redhead.†
Chpt Epil.
- With each spring the foals came.†
Chpt Epil.
- "They are the finest foals I have ever seen," he said when the first crop came, "and I am not prejudiced when I say this."†
Chpt Epil.
- The owner issued Christmas card photos of Seabiscuit standing with his foals.†
Chpt Epil.
- One of Fair Knightess's foals, Phantom Sea, became stakes-placed.†
Chpt Epil.
Definitions:
-
(1)
(foal) a young horse; or giving birth to a young horse
- (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)