its called a Trojan horse, it a type of virus, tht gets into ur computer and downloads a virus through some trigger. for instance there was one previously on facebook. it was sent to lots of people, by someone you knew (but that person didnt really send it; part of the virus) & it said that you are on some video. when you clicked the link, unless you had good firewall protection, you received a virus.
This would depend on how the term was used. If you mean ' the horse threw a shoe.' that would mean the horse lost it's shoe somehow. If it was ' the horse threw the rider.' it means the horse lost it's rider somehow. It can also mean the horse 'threw' a foal ( gave birth/sired a foal). There are many meanings to this term, depending on how it was used.
To be a horses @$$, is to be an @$$hole
The term "horse for sale" is used in horse trading. It general means there is not a set price on the horse and the buyer should contact the seller to get more details.
A mustang is a horse too. The name comes from the term "horse-power".
stocky like a horse or dog
A horse that has one parent that is wild or some people say A domesticated horse that has become wild againThis can mean that the horse will let you pet or brush it but may not let you ride it.
It means losing a horse shoe.
If you mean with abridle, just not using the reins, then there really isn't a term for that. If you mean with out a bridle, the term you are looking for is bridleless.
Pony is the term used to describe a horse under 14.2 hands high. If it is any higher, it is a horse. The term has nothing to do with age or gender.
It means to stop suddenly, not to get to the goal. To pull up is a horse riding term meaning to pull on the reins to make the horse stop.
Are you sure you do mean shank's mare which is a term for going on foot ? It is a kind of joke to say something like "we rode shank's mare" meaning we had to walk.
I've personally never heard the term 'to grass a horse'. However the term to 'putting a horse out to grass' or 'the horse is on grass' are widely used in the UK. I would assume therefore that it would be the same thing as those terms. A horse at grass means it is eating pasture grass and may or may not be supplemented with hay or hard feeds.