Think about that for a minute and you can figure it out. What good would it do to lock up the barn after the horse ran off?
An easy keeper, or a "simple keeper" is a horse that is no trouble around the stable. He doesn't crib, paw, kick or bite. When being led he doesn't try to take off or get ahead of the stable-hand. In all, it is simply a horse who is well behaved in the barn.
In 'The Darkess Hour'. The roof of the barn collapes while Amy and Ty were trying to get the horse out during a tornado.
Every country or language has a saying like this. It means to be involved in a superfluous act or to do something useless. In Yiddish it is carrying straw to Egypt. Since Pharoah forbade the Jewish slaves to use straw in making bricks, to take straw there would be useless. In England it's, bringing coals to Newcastle, in the U.S. it's closing the barn door after the horse is out. Idioms are fun.
The singular possessive form of the noun barn is barn's.
"A tornado hit the barn." would be a sentence.
Actually... ?? a Horse ?? Anyways.. Lock The Horse In The Barn And Then You Can Type !
What? Barn door lock on a Yukon????
A horse has a stall inside the stable or barn.
Katie, lock the barn. You couldn't hit the side of a barn if you were standing inside of it.
Yes horses live in barn.
if you are talking of outside, you can build something like a lean-to or small open barn or the horse to shelter in bad weather or from cold. but if you can, in bad weather or cold keep your horse in its stall in the barn.
Slowly introduce the horse to new places as you progressively work towards your goal of the horse not being barn sour. You do this by making it fun to be away from the barn or stable. See if the horse does better if he / she has a companion to go with them, maybe take a special treat along with you and offer it to your horse when it is being good and not trying to get back to the barn. Or simply change your routine.
a bowl out of the barn
In a stall
You must buy a ranch in order to have a barn.
You push it into the barn yourself~
Please put the horse in the barn.