Someone or something that did something daring supposedly "Ran with the Horses".
Awesome_oasis
To be a horses @$$, is to be an @$$hole
24 horses ran in the 2010 Melbourne Cup.
Both could be used in different situations: The horse ran fastest of all the horses in the race. The horse ran faster than all of the other horses. When the man, the horse and the dog ran, the horse ran fastest. The horse ran faster than the man and the dog.
an also-ran refers to losing horses in a horse race
All horses have 12 vertebra, except Arabians: they have 13. "Man O' War" ran 20 races and won 19; he lost his only race to a horse named "Upset", and that's where we get the term "upset victory."
24 horses ran in the 2008 Melbourne Cup.
13
17
yes it's true. they ran horses into thehousesand sometimes the horses got hurt, or sometimes died.
Eleven, total.
mostly grazed on grass and ran around
I just got on the computer to get the same answer -- about horses, as they just said it on TVG. Apparently, it means that the horse is running brilliantly -- although I still don't understand the derivation of the term. These announcers pick up a new saying and can't stop using it. :)