Righteous. Stand-up. Straight-shooter.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This describes an ornery or angry man or animal. You wouldn't want to be called ringy.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This one's a nonsense phrase. "I'm your huckleberry" just meant "I'm your man."
because he was an a good man
The slang abbreviation BMW usually refers to the phrase Black Man's Woman; denoting a Caucasian or Asian women who tends to date men of African descent.
Beefcake, hottie, eye candy
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! A coon was a mountain man term for a person. A gone coon was a goner, a lost man, past recovery.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This one referred to a small, narrow-minded man. The image is of someone not worth ten cents.
the man was not a good rider
a "man of the people" or a "common man"
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant a dashing, sensation-causing man. It was often applied to clergymen and politicians.
A preposition is a part of speech that starts a prepositional phrase, such as "the man OF THE HOUSE". The preposition would be "of" and the complete phrase would be "of the house". I guess you could say that a preposition describes nouns, as in aforementioned sentence, "man" would just be a plain noun without the phrase.
A batty man is Caribbean slang for a homosexual.