England native mares and Arabian
quarter horses and thoroughbreds
Thoroughbreds are purebreds with a closed studbook, therefore only two Thoroughbreds can create a Thoroughbred foal. No other breeds are allowed or used.
They have an ancestry of Quarter Horses and Thoroughbreds.
The answer is yes. Other breeds of horses have been known to out-race thoroughbreds. The Morgan horse is one of these, who was recorded to successfully out-run two valuable thoroughbreds. The standardbred is another breed that can out-race thoroughbreds. I own a nine year old, 15.1hh stb mare and she has out-raced 16hh+ 13 year old successful racing thoroughbreds.
This depends on what you mean by Thoroughbred Paint. Thoroughbreds and Paints are two separate breeds. You can however have Thoroughbreds with pinto markings, but they are not Paints. You can also have Paint horses registered as appendix if they have one Thoroughbred parent.
There are two breeds of Welsh corgis, the Cardigan and the Pembroke, each named for the county in Wales where it originated. The differences between the two breeds include bone structure, body length, and size.
There are some purebreds, but most are the result of a cross breeds. I think the Arabian is among the oldest purebred horses, along with a few others, like the akhal-teke. Thoroughbreds, Quarter horses, Tennessee Walkers, and most other breeds are the result of crossing between at least two other breeds, however, they are considered purebred once they have been bred within that breed for a few generations. And then tehre are the breeds considered crossbreeds, like the Anglo-Arab,a cross between an Arabia and a thoroughbred. or an Appendix horse, the cross of a thoroughbred and a quarter horse. So, horses can be both a crossbreed, or a purebreed.
They are simply two different breeds, originating from different parents and other breeds. They have different bloodlines.
Nursery
Two Thoroughbreds - 1939 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:AL (original rating) (1940) Sweden:Btl USA:Approved USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
Hot-blood breeds like thoroughbreds would probably be one of the hardest to deal with becasue they are so highstrung, and awfully big too. However, each horse is different, and there are a good amount of calm thoroughbreds. A mustang would also be hard to train,as they are so wild. I have heard Brumbies are even worse than mustangs. However, again, horses are all different, and there are some wild horses that take to training like a pig to mud.
Nursery