释义 |
Definition of brooder in English: broodernoun ˈbruːdəˈbrudər 1A heated house for chicks or piglets. the chicks were young and had to be kept in the brooder Example sentencesExamples - After this, the chick is moved to a pre-prepared brooder set at a temperature of 36 degrees Celsius (96.8 degrees Fahrenheit) for the first five days.
- The wire flooring of their brooder cages prevented immediate reinfection via fecal consumption.
- Located close to the main entrance of the zoo, the brooder room will be used to incubate eggs and house the hatched chicks.
- Four years ago, Arner and Handeen moved an old brooder house onto a concrete slab that once supported a granary.
- Day-old chicks are delivered to Solbury Farm and reared in brooder houses on turkey crumbs.
- Figure 5 shows a box that can be used as a brooder house for the chicks.
- All birds were hatched in incubators and kept in brooders until approximately 7 weeks of age, at which time they were moved to 5 x 7 x 4 m outdoor flight pens.
- A new brooder room for incubating eggs and hand-rearing baby birds is to be formally opened at the Johannesburg Zoo during the Sasol Bird Fair on 3 and 4 September.
- Almost like a hospital with a maternity ward for expectant mothers, the brooder room also houses sick and injured birds and has a recovery room.
- After 24 hours the chicks should be dry and ready to move to a brooder where they can be given food and water.
- Chicks were hatched in incubators and kept indoors in brooders for the first 6 weeks of their life.
- Heaters, brooders, feed and water delivery systems, ventilation fans all continue to regulate environment.
2A person who broods about something. he's a brooder, worrying about everything Example sentencesExamples - The second half is loaded with these 3 A.M. smoking cigarettes-on-your-balcony brooders, and you'd think it'd get bogged down worse than a fat-farm delivery bus in a flash flood on a dirt road, but it just gets… y'know, moody.
- Hip-hop lovers say that it is the very mature soundtrack of the big-city brooder.
- Was he an outspoken child who led the others in their games, or was he a quiet brooder who sat and daydreamed about what he'd grow up to be?
- ‘Lately, it's really struck me a lot that I don't have to be a brooder, or so focused on golf every second, to play my best,’ he says.
- For all his friendliness, Keloid Kenneth was a brooder who preferred to socialize instead of chat.
- In contrast, Bertie Carvel's fine, upstanding Karl is both latter-day Robin Hood, punishing his gang's excesses, and Hamletesque brooder meditating on life and death.
- I'm a brooder and a thinker, so doing that wasn't easy for me, but I did do it.
- At 18 his artwork swam across two albums by alt-country brooder Will Oldham, then sunned on the walls of a Tokyo art gallery.
- As I was watching, I kept getting surprised because she was such a brooder in Blue Crush, trying so hard to be a sex goddess in Rules of Attraction, and so abused in Wonderland that all this smiling was a really pleasure.
- I suspect I may be a secret sucker for authoritative brooders, with a redeeming sense of humour.
- Each teen has a stock personality: the leader, the fat guy, the brooder.
- Brooding on this - and Blair is a brooder, as his recent melancholy-tinged interview with Robert Harris showed - the Prime Minister may care to turn his mind to Romsey, and brighten.
Rhymes Barbuda, barracuda, Bermuda, Buxtehude, colluder, deluder, excluder, intruder, Judah, Luda, Neruda, obtruder, Tudor Definition of brooder in US English: broodernounˈbro͞odərˈbrudər 1A heated house for chicks or piglets. the chicks were young and had to be kept in the brooder Example sentencesExamples - Located close to the main entrance of the zoo, the brooder room will be used to incubate eggs and house the hatched chicks.
- Chicks were hatched in incubators and kept indoors in brooders for the first 6 weeks of their life.
- All birds were hatched in incubators and kept in brooders until approximately 7 weeks of age, at which time they were moved to 5 x 7 x 4 m outdoor flight pens.
- Heaters, brooders, feed and water delivery systems, ventilation fans all continue to regulate environment.
- The wire flooring of their brooder cages prevented immediate reinfection via fecal consumption.
- Figure 5 shows a box that can be used as a brooder house for the chicks.
- Almost like a hospital with a maternity ward for expectant mothers, the brooder room also houses sick and injured birds and has a recovery room.
- A new brooder room for incubating eggs and hand-rearing baby birds is to be formally opened at the Johannesburg Zoo during the Sasol Bird Fair on 3 and 4 September.
- After 24 hours the chicks should be dry and ready to move to a brooder where they can be given food and water.
- Day-old chicks are delivered to Solbury Farm and reared in brooder houses on turkey crumbs.
- Four years ago, Arner and Handeen moved an old brooder house onto a concrete slab that once supported a granary.
- After this, the chick is moved to a pre-prepared brooder set at a temperature of 36 degrees Celsius (96.8 degrees Fahrenheit) for the first five days.
2A person who broods about something. he's a brooder, worrying about everything Example sentencesExamples - ‘Lately, it's really struck me a lot that I don't have to be a brooder, or so focused on golf every second, to play my best,’ he says.
- As I was watching, I kept getting surprised because she was such a brooder in Blue Crush, trying so hard to be a sex goddess in Rules of Attraction, and so abused in Wonderland that all this smiling was a really pleasure.
- Hip-hop lovers say that it is the very mature soundtrack of the big-city brooder.
- At 18 his artwork swam across two albums by alt-country brooder Will Oldham, then sunned on the walls of a Tokyo art gallery.
- Brooding on this - and Blair is a brooder, as his recent melancholy-tinged interview with Robert Harris showed - the Prime Minister may care to turn his mind to Romsey, and brighten.
- Was he an outspoken child who led the others in their games, or was he a quiet brooder who sat and daydreamed about what he'd grow up to be?
- I suspect I may be a secret sucker for authoritative brooders, with a redeeming sense of humour.
- In contrast, Bertie Carvel's fine, upstanding Karl is both latter-day Robin Hood, punishing his gang's excesses, and Hamletesque brooder meditating on life and death.
- Each teen has a stock personality: the leader, the fat guy, the brooder.
- For all his friendliness, Keloid Kenneth was a brooder who preferred to socialize instead of chat.
- The second half is loaded with these 3 A.M. smoking cigarettes-on-your-balcony brooders, and you'd think it'd get bogged down worse than a fat-farm delivery bus in a flash flood on a dirt road, but it just gets… y'know, moody.
- I'm a brooder and a thinker, so doing that wasn't easy for me, but I did do it.
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