[go: nahoru, domu]

See also: cowchip and cow-chip

English

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Alternative forms

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Noun

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cow chip (plural cow chips)

  1. A piece of dried cow dung, used especially as fuel in the Third World and by early North American settlers.
    • 1877, Philip Reese Uhler, "ART. XXXI - Report upon the insects collected by P. R. Uhler during the explorations of 1875," U. S. Department of the Interior, p. 778 (Google preview):
      Eleodes obsoleta: Common on the plains, beneath cow-chips and rubbish, everywhere from Denver to Colorado Springs.
    • 1995, Laban Samuel Records, Cherokee Outlet Cowboy, →ISBN, page 90:
      He unhitched and unharnessed the team, turned it loose with the horse herd, remuda, and helped the cook gather cow chips for fuel.
    • 2012, Mike Cox, Texas Panhandle Tales, →ISBN, page 121:
      When cattle replaced buffalo on the plains, cow chips in turn replaced buffalo chips as a ready source of British thermal units.

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Further reading

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  • cow chip”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.