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单词 fox hunting
释义

Definition of fox hunting in English:

fox hunting

noun
mass noun
  • The sport of hunting a fox across country with a pack of hounds by a group of people on foot and horseback, a traditional sport of the English landed gentry.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I have presented my opinion on the arguments for fox-hunting.
    • He said: ‘An awful lot of us do not see anything wrong with fox-hunting but if the law says it must stop then we will have to do what we are told.’
    • The Brigg and Goole MP, who is former North Lincolnshire council leader, said so far he was minded to vote for an amendment to ban fox-hunting completely.
    • On the other side of the argument, people say that we have no right to kill foxes in the way that we do, and that fox-hunting is both cruel and barbarous.
    • In the first of a series of votes, MPs rejected a Lords proposal to allow registered fox-hunting, stag hunting and hare coursing.
    • The Hunting Act, which outlaws fox-hunting, deer-hunting and hare-coursing with dogs, comes into force on Friday.
    • The Bill makes it an offence to use dogs to hunt wild mammals, effectively ruling out mounted fox-hunting and some other activities such as hare coursing.
    • Push through those last items that seem to have been on the government's statute books for months - in particular, the bill to finally outlaw fox-hunting.
    • If the bill jumps its final hurdles, fox-hunting could be banned in Scotland at a time when it might still be legal in England.
    • Bloodsport enthusiasts have always denied that fox-hunting is inherently cruel.
    • When four Hampshire hunts turned out on Saturday it was hard to believe that the traditional pursuit of fox-hunting had just been banned.
    • The ban is due to take effect on February 18 and will end fox-hunting, stag hunting, and hare-coursing with dogs.
    • But the crux of my opposition to fox-hunting is this: the people who do it are enjoying a leisure pastime whose pivot is the violent death of an animal, not for food.
    • The Bill proposes to outlaw stag-hunting and hare-coursing while allowing fox-hunting with hounds to continue under licence.
    • It is argued that fox-hunting is part of a traditional country way of life.
    • There's also the thousands of people employed indirectly or directly by fox-hunting who would lose their jobs.
    • Yet when fox-hunting was considered a sport, from its inception in the eighteenth century, it was far from an amateurish or cost-free pursuit.
    • MPs were tonight set to vote overwhelmingly to outlaw fox-hunting, amid claims that many scores of North Yorkshire jobs are at stake.
    • ‘I am pleased that they will draw attention to my determination to ban fox-hunting,’ he told the Yorkshire Post.
    • The campaigners say the rural economy has already been devastated by the foot-and-mouth crisis and claim a ban on fox-hunting would lead to thousands more job losses.

Derivatives

  • fox hunter

  • noun
    • For the dedicated enthusiast, fox-hunting was a huge commitment and not only did the Master fork out tremendous sums, but serious fox-hunters needed private incomes to afford the time to hunt.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He comes from a long line of fox-hunters.
      • Victorian fox-hunters bemoaned constraints such as railways and barbed wire.
      • We were both riders, I, an eventer, and she a fox-hunter.
      • She stressed that fox-hunters were prepared to accept a licensed regime as the sport was already self-regulated.
 
 

Definition of fox hunting in US English:

fox hunting

nounˈfäks ˌhən(t)iNG
  • The sport of hunting a fox across country with a pack of hounds by a group of people on foot and horseback, a traditional sport of the English landed gentry.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Bloodsport enthusiasts have always denied that fox-hunting is inherently cruel.
    • The ban is due to take effect on February 18 and will end fox-hunting, stag hunting, and hare-coursing with dogs.
    • The Bill proposes to outlaw stag-hunting and hare-coursing while allowing fox-hunting with hounds to continue under licence.
    • The Brigg and Goole MP, who is former North Lincolnshire council leader, said so far he was minded to vote for an amendment to ban fox-hunting completely.
    • ‘I am pleased that they will draw attention to my determination to ban fox-hunting,’ he told the Yorkshire Post.
    • Yet when fox-hunting was considered a sport, from its inception in the eighteenth century, it was far from an amateurish or cost-free pursuit.
    • The Hunting Act, which outlaws fox-hunting, deer-hunting and hare-coursing with dogs, comes into force on Friday.
    • MPs were tonight set to vote overwhelmingly to outlaw fox-hunting, amid claims that many scores of North Yorkshire jobs are at stake.
    • I have presented my opinion on the arguments for fox-hunting.
    • If the bill jumps its final hurdles, fox-hunting could be banned in Scotland at a time when it might still be legal in England.
    • On the other side of the argument, people say that we have no right to kill foxes in the way that we do, and that fox-hunting is both cruel and barbarous.
    • But the crux of my opposition to fox-hunting is this: the people who do it are enjoying a leisure pastime whose pivot is the violent death of an animal, not for food.
    • When four Hampshire hunts turned out on Saturday it was hard to believe that the traditional pursuit of fox-hunting had just been banned.
    • Push through those last items that seem to have been on the government's statute books for months - in particular, the bill to finally outlaw fox-hunting.
    • He said: ‘An awful lot of us do not see anything wrong with fox-hunting but if the law says it must stop then we will have to do what we are told.’
    • It is argued that fox-hunting is part of a traditional country way of life.
    • The Bill makes it an offence to use dogs to hunt wild mammals, effectively ruling out mounted fox-hunting and some other activities such as hare coursing.
    • There's also the thousands of people employed indirectly or directly by fox-hunting who would lose their jobs.
    • In the first of a series of votes, MPs rejected a Lords proposal to allow registered fox-hunting, stag hunting and hare coursing.
    • The campaigners say the rural economy has already been devastated by the foot-and-mouth crisis and claim a ban on fox-hunting would lead to thousands more job losses.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/20 19:42:48