horse-dealer in Vietnamese

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Sentence patterns related to "horse-dealer"

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

1. Bucephalus stood out among the horses, causing Phillip II to inquire about the horse, the horse dealer, quoted enormous price for the horse.

2. Old-Time Gardens Alice Morse Earle He was a former horse-dealer, a stout asthmatic man with perpetual wheezings and Blowings and rattlings of phlegm in his throat

3. Bucephalus was the famous and well-loved horse of Alexander the Great. Plutarch tells the story of how a 12-year old Alexander won the horse: A horse dealer offered the horse to Alexander's father, Philip II of Macedonia, for the enormous sum of 13 talents.

4. Cozen (v.) "to cheat, defraud," 1560s, of uncertain origin; perhaps from French cousiner "cheat on pretext of being a cousin;" or from Middle English cosyn "fraud, trickery" (mid-15c.), which is perhaps related to Old French coçon "dealer, merchant, trader," from Latin cocionem "horse dealer." Related: Cozened; Cozening; cozenage.

5. Cozen (v.) "to cheat, defraud," 1560s, of uncertain origin; perhaps from French cousiner "cheat on pretext of being a cousin;" or from Middle English cosyn "fraud, trickery" (mid-15c.), which is perhaps related to Old French coçon "dealer, merchant, trader," from Latin cocionem "horse dealer." Related: Cozened; Cozening; Cozenage.

6. Cozen (v.) "to cheat, defraud," 1560s, of uncertain origin; perhaps from French cousiner "cheat on pretext of being a cousin;" or from Middle English cosyn "fraud, trickery" (mid-15c.), which is perhaps related to Old French coçon "dealer, merchant, trader," from Latin cocionem "horse dealer." Related: Cozened; cozening; Cozenage.

7. Cozen (v.) "to cheat, defraud," 1560s, of uncertain origin; perhaps from French cousiner "cheat on pretext of being a cousin;" or from Middle English cosyn "fraud, trickery" (mid-15c.), which is perhaps related to Old French coçon "dealer, merchant, trader," from Latin cocionem "horse dealer." Related: Cozened; cozening; cozenage.