To "put a horse to paddock" is either to retire him, and let him/her live a calm, restful rest of a life.
Or it could simply mean to let them out into a paddock or grassy field to graze or relax.
To explain why your verb is what it is.
Dont you mean irregular verb no such word as 'eregular'?
No. A verb is an action. I mean run is a verb because it's an action word.
Hadn't is a contraction of the verb 'had' and the adverb 'not'; the contraction acts as a verb.
A verb is a doing word. Example: TomJUMPED over the wall in that sentence the word jumped was the verb
a female sheep.
Find out how big it is.
they can't be on the paddock, they can only be in the paddock
Corral, noun: paddock, pen, enclosure Corral, verb: trap, enclose, restrict, restrain; gather, collect
A horse is "turned out" into a paddock or pasture to graze.
The phrase 'horses at pasture' simply means that they are out in a grassy area (such as a paddock) eating grass or feeding. Sometimes it may also mean a horse is retired in a paddock. :)
Mob can be a verb or a noun.Verb -- The crowd mobbed the accused murderer. - past tensenoun -- The mob broke windows and looted the stores.The mob of sheep escaped from the paddock. - collective noun for sheep.
In Shakespearean times, "paddock" referred to a toad. When Shakespeare wrote about "paddock calls," he was likely referring to the croaky sounds made by toads, often associated with magical or supernatural themes in his plays.
My horses are out the back in the paddock
Dandelion Paddock was created in 1789.
Paddock of Love was created in 1988.
Francis Paddock died in 1889.