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单词 ranch
释义

Definition of ranch in English:

ranch

noun rɑːn(t)ʃræn(t)ʃ
  • 1A large farm, especially in North America or Australia, where cattle or other animals are bred.

    a beef cattle ranch
    fur ranches for silver fox and mink
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Franciscan missionaries established an extensive chain of missions, Spanish entrepreneurs established ranches and farms.
    • ARS is working with Audubon California on restoration projects on farms and ranches.
    • Later, he would join them riding, roping and wrangling cattle on the ranch.
    • On the ranch or feed lot, this may not be all that difficult, particularly in smaller herds.
    • Most of them are being raised like cattle on big ranches to provide beef for buffalo burgers.
    • On January 1, California's new tougher standards for those convicted of trespassing on farms and ranches went into effect.
    • And he made a good living from it, visiting ranches, branding the cattle.
    • Here's some footage of my wife, Nellie, taken at a recent cattle sale at our ranch.
    • All these attributes make alfalfa a highly desirable crop for many farms and ranches.
    • Small ranchers in northern New Mexico pay to graze 1 to 25 cattle per ranch in this oasis all summer.
    • Many Afro-Brazilians work as field hands on ranches and large plantations.
    • Eyes brightening, Adam envisioned the relief and joy on his father's face when he arrived back at the ranch with the missing cattle in tow.
    • A herd of Texas Longhorn cattle will adorn the ranch.
    • There is a low population density, with the majority of people living on farms and ranches in rural settings.
    • The wolf was trapped and killed because it epitomized the wilderness that settlers sought to tame and replace with farms and ranches.
    • Most have moved tremendous numbers of cattle from one ranch to another rather than selling off herds for slaughter.
    • All 50 states have beef cattle and 30 states each have at least 10,000 cattle farms and ranches.
    • Cattle ranches dominate the economy and the language spoken is just as likely to be Portuguese as English.
    • The decline in farms and ranches occurred primarily in agricultural operations with less than $10,000 in sales.
    • Musk thistle, one of Nebraska's seven noxious weeds, is widespread and reduces agricultural production on farms and ranches.
    Synonyms
    smallholding, holding, farmstead, steading, grange, plantation, estate
    1. 1.1North American A single-storey house.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The postman is used to delivering mysterious parcels, packets and letters to the old ranch house, mostly from faraway places with strange sounding names.
      • The first house that I had a mortgage for was a ranch house in Edison, New Jersey.
      • He waved to Jacob's mother who was standing on the ranch house's porch.
      • At the old ranch house where Mama grew up the radio sat in the front room near the fireplace.
      • As peace settled on the old ranch house with the departure of the builders in the early evening, Harry and Dolly and me spent the last hour of daylight outside, sighing with relief.
      • Trek sunk back into his lonely, dark state quickly as they walked up the porch and knocked on the front door of a ranch house.
      • Back home at the ranch house a full day of intermittent showers has washed the dust out of the air and made everything clean and sparkling again.
      • Both the tiny cottage in remote Wales and the old ranch house in Somerset were daunting projects, requiring extensive and complete make-over.
      • Dusty Miller squinted to see the ranch house in the valley below.
      • I heard the distant chime of the bell up at the ranch house, and we both knew it was time to head in.
      • The young singer was able to buy his parents a comfortable ranch house in Memphis - the first nice house the little family had ever owned.
      • Leaving his rambling ranch house in fashionable North Dallas, he drove his Jaguar to his psychiatric offices.
      • As she approached the ranch house, a little boy about two years old came running out of the house going as fast as his little legs could carry him.
      • I suddenly was struck by how much his ranch house contrasted to my dingy apartment.
      • Another couple asked Holton to evaluate their 1950s ranch house for the possibility of adding a home office.
      • At the sight of the ranch house, he sighs with relief and leaves his tired horse at the edge of the porch.
      • He beckoned her to follow him out to the front porch of the old ranch house where he pointed to a buck grazing in the field across the dirt road.
      • He was looking forward to getting home to the warm comfort of the ranch house and getting something good to eat from Hop Sing's kitchen.
      • Killaloe in Co Clare is the rather unusual setting for an American-style ranch house, albeit one built of bricks and mortar rather than timber.
      • His home is a simple ranch house with sheets for curtains and an unattractive brown lawn.
  • 2North American trademark in UK mass noun A type of thick white salad dressing made with sour cream.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They have individual little snack-size packs of ranch dressing now.
    • I skip the butter and sour cream and opt for broccoli or lowfat or nonfat ranch dressing.
    • Nacho chips with salsa and vegetables with ranch dressing are served on top of rectangular tables.
    • So fill in by serving baby carrots or sliced red or green peppers or cucumbers with light ranch dressing.
    • A package of ranch dressing or dill dressing will make your average mashed potatoes more exciting.
    • I'll have the deluxe salad with ranch dressing.
    • I ordered a double cheeseburger (no mustard) with French fries and a side salad with ranch dressing.
    • Include bell pepper slices or baby carrots with ranch dressing or spaghetti sauce for dunking.
    • Vanessa's attention was engulfed by the sports game, and she seemed to have shut the whole world out as she munched on carrot sticks and ranch dressing.
    • For my part, I think I'll try some cheese fries with ranch dressing.
    • First, there was the school cook who congratulated me for eating a diet of iceberg lettuce and watery ranch dressing for an entire week.
    • No wonder people have to slather their salads in ranch dressing.
    • The restaurant's ranch dressing has a bright, tart tang that turned the tomatoes into a roadhouse classic.
    • Cut up crisp vegetable sticks with dipping sauce - ranch, peanut, sweet chili or tomato.
    • My wings have been seasoned with barbecue sauce and served with a side of ranch dressing and celery at some bar and grill in New York City.
    • Finally, avoid dipping sauces such as ranch or blue-cheese dressing.
    • It had cherry tomatoes, garlic croutons, and ranch dressing, and was quite tasty.
    • I'd use Italian dressing because you need less Italian to spread over your salad compared to ranch dressing.
    • I try not to get into them too often, but what I will nibble on are pretzels dipped in ranch dressing.
    • She sat across from the little girl at her kitchen table with a large plate of freshly chopped rainbow peppers sitting between them and ranch dressing to dip them in.
verb rɑːn(t)ʃræn(t)ʃ
[no object]often as noun ranching
  • 1Run a ranch.

    cattle ranching
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Many California dude ranches are working cattle ranches that have existed for generations.
    • If I hadn't been so good at the family business I would take up cattle ranching.
    • Because I love horses and cattle and ranching, I also helped outside all I could, and loved it.
    • Environmentalists want Lula to push for jobs in areas like sustainable forestry and tourism rather than cattle ranching and soy farming.
    • Jerry Cooney in turn analyzes the Paraguayan frontier and how the economy shifted from the exploitation of yerba mate, the Paraguayan tea in the colonial period, to cattle ranching.
    • Causes of habitat destruction were many and synergistic, involving agricultural practices, cattle ranching, and urban growth.
    • Throughout the nineteenth century, England was the largest investor in American land development, railroads, mining, cattle ranching, and heavy industry.
    • She makes a living applying animal psychology research to fields like cattle ranching.
    • They pointed out, for example, that the spread of cattle ranching in South America to meet U.S. demands for beef was contributing directly to the destruction of the rain forests.
    • A 1997 study of endangered species in the southwestern United States by the Fish and Wildlife Service found that half the species studied were threatened by cattle ranching.
    • Overall, county agricultural land that was once in crops has increasingly shifted to pasture and cattle ranching.
    • This in turn has served to fuel hostility from those whose survival depends on lowland pastures and has affected cattle ranching and tourism in wildlife reserves.
    • Mr Mubanga, now a businessman and politician does cattle ranching and mixed farming on his 200 hectare farm in Chief Chimese's area in Mansa.
    • In arid regions traditionally used for cattle ranching, farms could be a maximum of 2000 hectares.
    • Sixty percent of the nation's gold is mined here, and the county relies heavily on its natural resources for cattle ranching.
    • But the truth is that Teddy Roosevelt's old stomping ground is in trouble - threatened by both cattle ranching and oil drilling.
    • In the West, cattle and sheep ranching soon forged the strongest economic link between Scotland and the United States.
    • Cattle ranching, however, has become more important to them and many Sioux derive some economic benefit from the cattle industry.
    • The history of cattle ranching in what is today the Municipio of Alamos began with the discovery of rich silver deposits in 1683.
    • A large part of its economy is dependent on agriculture and cattle ranching.
    1. 1.1often as adjective ranchedwith object Breed (animals) on a ranch.
      ranched salmon
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Among the dead, they think, were the many farmers who ranched buffalo on a huge set of interlocking, highly sophisticated farms across the mid-west.
      • Farmers fatten livestock for the market so why don't fishermen ranch fish?
      • Then there's Brother Mesquite from the monastery that ranches bison, and a nice joke about a cowboy who wears clothes all made of brown paper, who gets hanged for rustling.
      • The Epperson's way of pasture ranching horses allows the horses to learn herd behavior and grow up in nature's elements.
      • This is the Salmon Research Trust Centre at Burrishoole, where scientists spend their days studying salmon and ranching them.
      • Many carnivores, such as mink, seal, fox, and bobcat, have long been hunted or ranched for their fur.
    2. 1.2with object Use (land) as a ranch.
      we've ranched this area for almost two decades
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The ranch is still the original tract patented to Henry Freisen in 1836 and has been ranched continuously ever since that time.

Origin

Early 19th century: from Spanish rancho 'group of persons eating together'.

  • The ranch featuring in many Westerns appears in American sources from the early 19th century and comes from Spanish rancho, ‘a group of people eating together’. The phrase meanwhile back at the ranch was originally used in cowboy stories to introduce a subsidiary plot.

Rhymes

blanch, Blanche, branch, tranche
 
 

Definition of ranch in US English:

ranch

nounræn(t)ʃran(t)SH
  • 1A large farm, especially in the western US and Canada, where cattle or other animals are bred and raised.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most have moved tremendous numbers of cattle from one ranch to another rather than selling off herds for slaughter.
    • On the ranch or feed lot, this may not be all that difficult, particularly in smaller herds.
    • There is a low population density, with the majority of people living on farms and ranches in rural settings.
    • Franciscan missionaries established an extensive chain of missions, Spanish entrepreneurs established ranches and farms.
    • Cattle ranches dominate the economy and the language spoken is just as likely to be Portuguese as English.
    • Small ranchers in northern New Mexico pay to graze 1 to 25 cattle per ranch in this oasis all summer.
    • ARS is working with Audubon California on restoration projects on farms and ranches.
    • A herd of Texas Longhorn cattle will adorn the ranch.
    • The wolf was trapped and killed because it epitomized the wilderness that settlers sought to tame and replace with farms and ranches.
    • And he made a good living from it, visiting ranches, branding the cattle.
    • On January 1, California's new tougher standards for those convicted of trespassing on farms and ranches went into effect.
    • Later, he would join them riding, roping and wrangling cattle on the ranch.
    • Most of them are being raised like cattle on big ranches to provide beef for buffalo burgers.
    • Eyes brightening, Adam envisioned the relief and joy on his father's face when he arrived back at the ranch with the missing cattle in tow.
    • Here's some footage of my wife, Nellie, taken at a recent cattle sale at our ranch.
    • All these attributes make alfalfa a highly desirable crop for many farms and ranches.
    • Many Afro-Brazilians work as field hands on ranches and large plantations.
    • Musk thistle, one of Nebraska's seven noxious weeds, is widespread and reduces agricultural production on farms and ranches.
    • The decline in farms and ranches occurred primarily in agricultural operations with less than $10,000 in sales.
    • All 50 states have beef cattle and 30 states each have at least 10,000 cattle farms and ranches.
    Synonyms
    smallholding, holding, farmstead, steading, grange, plantation, estate
    1. 1.1North American A single-story, sometimes split-level, house, typically with a low-pitched roof.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • As she approached the ranch house, a little boy about two years old came running out of the house going as fast as his little legs could carry him.
      • The first house that I had a mortgage for was a ranch house in Edison, New Jersey.
      • He beckoned her to follow him out to the front porch of the old ranch house where he pointed to a buck grazing in the field across the dirt road.
      • He waved to Jacob's mother who was standing on the ranch house's porch.
      • I heard the distant chime of the bell up at the ranch house, and we both knew it was time to head in.
      • Both the tiny cottage in remote Wales and the old ranch house in Somerset were daunting projects, requiring extensive and complete make-over.
      • Leaving his rambling ranch house in fashionable North Dallas, he drove his Jaguar to his psychiatric offices.
      • As peace settled on the old ranch house with the departure of the builders in the early evening, Harry and Dolly and me spent the last hour of daylight outside, sighing with relief.
      • Dusty Miller squinted to see the ranch house in the valley below.
      • The postman is used to delivering mysterious parcels, packets and letters to the old ranch house, mostly from faraway places with strange sounding names.
      • His home is a simple ranch house with sheets for curtains and an unattractive brown lawn.
      • At the old ranch house where Mama grew up the radio sat in the front room near the fireplace.
      • Another couple asked Holton to evaluate their 1950s ranch house for the possibility of adding a home office.
      • Back home at the ranch house a full day of intermittent showers has washed the dust out of the air and made everything clean and sparkling again.
      • The young singer was able to buy his parents a comfortable ranch house in Memphis - the first nice house the little family had ever owned.
      • Killaloe in Co Clare is the rather unusual setting for an American-style ranch house, albeit one built of bricks and mortar rather than timber.
      • He was looking forward to getting home to the warm comfort of the ranch house and getting something good to eat from Hop Sing's kitchen.
      • Trek sunk back into his lonely, dark state quickly as they walked up the porch and knocked on the front door of a ranch house.
      • I suddenly was struck by how much his ranch house contrasted to my dingy apartment.
      • At the sight of the ranch house, he sighs with relief and leaves his tired horse at the edge of the porch.
  • 2North American trademark in UK

    short for ranch dressing
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Include bell pepper slices or baby carrots with ranch dressing or spaghetti sauce for dunking.
    • First, there was the school cook who congratulated me for eating a diet of iceberg lettuce and watery ranch dressing for an entire week.
    • I'll have the deluxe salad with ranch dressing.
    • Finally, avoid dipping sauces such as ranch or blue-cheese dressing.
    • The restaurant's ranch dressing has a bright, tart tang that turned the tomatoes into a roadhouse classic.
    • Nacho chips with salsa and vegetables with ranch dressing are served on top of rectangular tables.
    • She sat across from the little girl at her kitchen table with a large plate of freshly chopped rainbow peppers sitting between them and ranch dressing to dip them in.
    • No wonder people have to slather their salads in ranch dressing.
    • It had cherry tomatoes, garlic croutons, and ranch dressing, and was quite tasty.
    • My wings have been seasoned with barbecue sauce and served with a side of ranch dressing and celery at some bar and grill in New York City.
    • I try not to get into them too often, but what I will nibble on are pretzels dipped in ranch dressing.
    • I'd use Italian dressing because you need less Italian to spread over your salad compared to ranch dressing.
    • Vanessa's attention was engulfed by the sports game, and she seemed to have shut the whole world out as she munched on carrot sticks and ranch dressing.
    • I skip the butter and sour cream and opt for broccoli or lowfat or nonfat ranch dressing.
    • Cut up crisp vegetable sticks with dipping sauce - ranch, peanut, sweet chili or tomato.
    • They have individual little snack-size packs of ranch dressing now.
    • I ordered a double cheeseburger (no mustard) with French fries and a side salad with ranch dressing.
    • For my part, I think I'll try some cheese fries with ranch dressing.
    • So fill in by serving baby carrots or sliced red or green peppers or cucumbers with light ranch dressing.
    • A package of ranch dressing or dill dressing will make your average mashed potatoes more exciting.
verbræn(t)ʃran(t)SH
[no object]often as noun ranching
  • 1Run a ranch.

    cattle ranching
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Overall, county agricultural land that was once in crops has increasingly shifted to pasture and cattle ranching.
    • Environmentalists want Lula to push for jobs in areas like sustainable forestry and tourism rather than cattle ranching and soy farming.
    • Jerry Cooney in turn analyzes the Paraguayan frontier and how the economy shifted from the exploitation of yerba mate, the Paraguayan tea in the colonial period, to cattle ranching.
    • Throughout the nineteenth century, England was the largest investor in American land development, railroads, mining, cattle ranching, and heavy industry.
    • Cattle ranching, however, has become more important to them and many Sioux derive some economic benefit from the cattle industry.
    • The history of cattle ranching in what is today the Municipio of Alamos began with the discovery of rich silver deposits in 1683.
    • If I hadn't been so good at the family business I would take up cattle ranching.
    • Mr Mubanga, now a businessman and politician does cattle ranching and mixed farming on his 200 hectare farm in Chief Chimese's area in Mansa.
    • But the truth is that Teddy Roosevelt's old stomping ground is in trouble - threatened by both cattle ranching and oil drilling.
    • Sixty percent of the nation's gold is mined here, and the county relies heavily on its natural resources for cattle ranching.
    • Causes of habitat destruction were many and synergistic, involving agricultural practices, cattle ranching, and urban growth.
    • They pointed out, for example, that the spread of cattle ranching in South America to meet U.S. demands for beef was contributing directly to the destruction of the rain forests.
    • This in turn has served to fuel hostility from those whose survival depends on lowland pastures and has affected cattle ranching and tourism in wildlife reserves.
    • She makes a living applying animal psychology research to fields like cattle ranching.
    • Because I love horses and cattle and ranching, I also helped outside all I could, and loved it.
    • In the West, cattle and sheep ranching soon forged the strongest economic link between Scotland and the United States.
    • A large part of its economy is dependent on agriculture and cattle ranching.
    • Many California dude ranches are working cattle ranches that have existed for generations.
    • A 1997 study of endangered species in the southwestern United States by the Fish and Wildlife Service found that half the species studied were threatened by cattle ranching.
    • In arid regions traditionally used for cattle ranching, farms could be a maximum of 2000 hectares.
    1. 1.1often as adjective ranchedwith object Breed (animals) on a ranch.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This is the Salmon Research Trust Centre at Burrishoole, where scientists spend their days studying salmon and ranching them.
      • The Epperson's way of pasture ranching horses allows the horses to learn herd behavior and grow up in nature's elements.
      • Farmers fatten livestock for the market so why don't fishermen ranch fish?
      • Many carnivores, such as mink, seal, fox, and bobcat, have long been hunted or ranched for their fur.
      • Among the dead, they think, were the many farmers who ranched buffalo on a huge set of interlocking, highly sophisticated farms across the mid-west.
      • Then there's Brother Mesquite from the monastery that ranches bison, and a nice joke about a cowboy who wears clothes all made of brown paper, who gets hanged for rustling.
    2. 1.2with object Use (land) as a ranch.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The ranch is still the original tract patented to Henry Freisen in 1836 and has been ranched continuously ever since that time.

Origin

Early 19th century: from Spanish rancho ‘group of persons eating together’.

 
 
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