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goatherd    
n. 牧羊人,牧羊者

牧羊人,牧羊者

goatherd
n 1: a person who tends a flock of goats [synonym: {goat herder},
{goatherd}]

Goatherd \Goat"herd`\, n.
One who tends goats. --Spenser.
[1913 Webster]


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  • What is a nice way to say kicking ass? [duplicate]
    Often in a professional setting, I want to say "X has really been kicking ass (and taking names!)" Sometimes I say "kicking butt" but it doesn't have quite the same emphasis I don't want to say ass as I don't think its polite in some contexts What is a equivalent expression that is polite yet just as encouraging?
  • american english - Polite, non-profane equivalent to ‘kick a* . . .
    'Kick Ass 103' would work as well But 'Trounce 103' or 'Dominate 103' , to take two good suggestions below, would, in my opinion, leave a reader rather puzzled as to what I was trying to say - about the only thing those two evoke are edgy website user names
  • expressions - Alternatives to kick your a** - English Language . . .
    Some friends suggested kick your bacon (but I am not sure if this means the same thing) I thought about using butt but this is another word I would like not to use Can I be classy and have the same impact at the same time? Or at least not be that vulgar? The context I am using the expression is I am gonna kick your ass out of the bed
  • Is kicking ass and taking names an offshoot of an older idiom?
    User "UnequivocallyAwesome" at Urban Dictionary claims it is a form of "Kick ass and ask questions later," which in turn is taken from "Shoot first, ask questions later," but UA has only this one entry and it has almost half as many downvotes as upvotes
  • What is this idiom: Im going to start taking names and. . . ?
    kick ass {or (euphem[istically]} butt or tail} 1 Esp Esp Mil[itary] to enforce one's authority or otherwise enforce oneself mercilessly or pugnaciously; (also) (prob the orig sense) to subdue others by beatings; (hence) to play the bully; in phr kick ass and take names to do so with great determination or success —also used fig —usu
  • What is the etymology of …kick ass and take names?
    It appears ass kicking itself dates back to the early '40s and the phrase having as much chance as a one-legged man in a mule butt ass-kicking contest The similar expression kick in the pants dates to the late 1800s Edit 4 15 11: I just antedated the 1965 reference by 11 years This is from John Oliver Killens' 1954 novel Youngblood:
  • What does Your team kicking serious butt mean?
    The phrase "kick ass" is a longstanding idiom that generally means someone is doing something really well, excelling, or, in your case, being awesome If you're looking for more information about it, thefreedictionary describes the phrase "kick ass kicking ass" as: Idioms: kick ass butt Vulgar Slang
  • To [put a] boot in the ass to do something — uncertain meaning
    The expression "a kick in the ass" (or, more mildly, "a kick in the pants") is sometimes used to refer to jumpstarting an individual, or getting a situation back on the right track, as in: "Our son needs to get a job!" "Yes, he needs a good kick in the pants "
  • What exactly is Imma? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The earliest such example I have (thanks to my brother Glen) is "F--- tha Police" by N W A , from 1988: "I'ma kick your ass " There's also House of Pain's "I'm a Swing It" from 1994, with the line "Ya dis me and I'm a dis ya back I'm a swing it " Imma continued to be used in more and more songs, though not in hit singles
  • Where does my ass come from? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    There are numerous early 20th century uses of the term ass referring to infliction of injury, many of which sound like attacks that would not be limited to the buttocks It may be that, as kicking one's ass came to refer to a triumph over the entire being, the use of ass to refer to that being slid into common usage





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