Hi,
As far as I know, I do not believe that there is an ending to the game. Or maybe there is but nobody has gone that far. :(
No, the horse lives in the end.
I believe you mean MOUNTING a horse. Mounting a horse means to get on, you will end up sitting on the horse's back.
If you are meaning 'rack', then yes a pacing horse can rack... However if you mean 'hack', then yes a horse can also hack.... Hacking is when a horse canters really slowly.... If you ever see a race horse, you will see at the end of the race, the horse canters REALLY slowly... you mainly see this on the winning horse... A hack is so slow that it is pretty much the same pace as a slow trot.
Horse Isle Answer: Neon tetra
The movie implied that she had an illness that affected her bones. That's why she took the medicine. She eventually died and so the grandfather bought the horse as a tribute to her. He eventually gave her up to Albert.
Trivial Pursuit - UK game show - ended in 1994.
Trivial Pursuit - game show - ended on 1994-12-30.
It is 'as always', but a better romantic signature to end a letter is 'love always.'
Romantic Princess ended on 2007-12-09.
Willie Weaver's new stepfather at the end of the book.
" A horse a piece" is from the Milwaukee area where bar dice are a common game played in local taverns. During certain times of the game a player who loses has "a horse on him". If all players end up with a horse on him, it is said "A horse a piece". This is also a very common phrase in these parts meaning equal to or takes the place of "it doesn't matter".
In the end, romantic.
That would be the horse's rear end (if the horse if facing north, then obviously his rear end is facing south)!
No, the horse lives in the end.
Acid Horse ended in 1989.
It depends what you mean by "romantic comedies". Most of Shakespeare's comedies are romantic in nature and end in weddings all around. Some of his late comedies are called "romances" and they end in reconciliations and reunifications all around instead of weddings.
The 1850s was the Late Romantic Era. It was the last part of the Romantic Era of fine arts and literature, which ended around the end of the 1850s.