pastoralist in English

noun
1
a sheep or cattle farmer.
When they killed sheep or cattle the pastoralists retaliated by killing the Aborigines.
2
a writer of pastorals.
In places the critic himself seems to have succumbed to the conventional wisdom, for instance portraying the Georgian poets as pastoralists and ignoring their rebellion against syrupy Victorianism.

Use "pastoralist" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "pastoralist" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "pastoralist", or refer to the context using the word "pastoralist" in the English Dictionary.

1. The Bedouin used to be pastoralist nomads and so they had to be mobile and lived in tents

2. There’s some dispute as to why pastoralist John Ross named the area Cracow back in 1851.

3. Backgrounding arrangements may vary depending on the level of risk the Backgrounding provider and the pastoralist are willing to negotiate and agree on

4. Ahasuerus - balladeer - balladist - Bucoliast - itinerant - major poet - minor poet - modernist - peregrine - rhymester - serenader - sonneteer - straggler - symbolist - trovatore 10 letter words folk singer - librettist - parnassian - rhapsodist - troubadour 11 letter words ballad maker - minnesinger - pastoralist - peripatetic …

5. Aramaean (plural Aramaeans) Any member of a West Semitic semi-nomadic and pastoralist people who lived in the Levant and later also in upper Mesopotamia (Biblical Aram) during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age.

6. The Aramaeans, also Arameans (Greek: Ἀραμαῖοι), were a Northwest Semitic semi-nomadic and pastoralist people who originated in what is now modern Syria (Biblical Aram) during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age. Large groups migrated to Mesopotamia where they intermingled with the native Akkadian (Assyrian and Babylonian) population.