Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The skill of riding horses; equitation.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The management of horses; specifically, the art of riding or controlling horses; equestrian skill. See
manège .
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun The act or art of riding, and of training and managing horses; manege.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun The
skill ofriding ahorse .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun skill in handling and riding horses
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word horsemanship.
Examples
-
You will come away knowing that Zapata was a real man of great strength, determination, and ideals who lived his life as a Mexican, defining himself between the extremes of poverty and Spanish class-ism; excelling in horsemanship, leadership, and just as macho as they come.
The Zapata Route in Morelos Part 1: The Land Was in His Heart 2008
-
You will come away knowing that Zapata was a real man of great strength, determination, and ideals who lived his life as a Mexican, defining himself between the extremes of poverty and Spanish class-ism; excelling in horsemanship, leadership, and just as macho as they come.
The Zapata Route in Morelos Part 1: The Land Was in His Heart 2008
-
You will come away knowing that Zapata was a real man of great strength, determination, and ideals who lived his life as a Mexican, defining himself between the extremes of poverty and Spanish class-ism; excelling in horsemanship, leadership, and just as macho as they come.
The Zapata Route in Morelos Part 1: The Land Was in His Heart 2008
-
Nor was there one more accomplished than she in horsemanship and martial exercises and all that behoveth a cavalier.
-
"Let's hope his horsemanship is equal to his attire!"
Mates at Billabong 1911
-
When we discuss the training of the Cavalry, the first point which naturally occurs to us is the question of 'horsemanship' -- _i. e._, the breaking-in of the horses and the teaching of equitation to the men.
Cavalry in Future Wars Friedrich von Bernhardi 1889
-
It is said that when desire and lust incite a man of understanding to aught, he considereth the end thereof and refraineth from that which they make fair and represseth with his reason his lust and his concupiscence; for, when these passions urge him to aught, it behoveth him to make his reason like unto a horseman skilled in horsemanship who, mounting a skittish horse, curbeth him with a sharp bit,107 so that he go aright with him and bear him whither he will.
-
And the horsemanship is the more impressive for typically being acquired, senior archer Shigenori Tanaka says, on shared horses at sessions held no more than once weekly.
Time's Arrow 2009
-
Makan grown up and flourishing and skilled in horsemanship.
-
I suppose readers interested in such voyeuristic subjects as Faulkner's drinking or his "horsemanship" might be disappointed in Parini's handling of them, but I can't imagine that anyone interested in Faulkner's fiction rather than his flaws as a human being would care even a microbit about these things.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.