sheep cote
21sheepcote — sheep·cote …
22sheepcote — sheep•cote [[t]ˈʃipˌkoʊt[/t]] n. agr. brit. chiefly brit. a pen or covered enclosure for sheep • Etymology: 1375–1425 …
23Sheepcot — Sheep cot , Sheepcote Sheep cote , n. A small inclosure for sheep; a pen; a fold. [1913 Webster] …
24Sheepcote — Sheepcot Sheep cot , Sheepcote Sheep cote , n. A small inclosure for sheep; a pen; a fold. [1913 Webster] …
25Korhogo — ▪ Côte d’Ivoire town, north central Côte d Ivoire (Ivory Coast). The town s traditional founder was Nangui (Nengué), a 14th century Senufo (Senoufo) patriarch from Kong. Modern Korhogo (Heritage) is the chief trade centre (corn [maize], manioc,… …
26Odienné — ▪ Côte d’Ivoire town, northwestern Côte d Ivoire (Ivory Coast), at the intersection of roads from Mali, Guinea, and the Ivoirian towns of Korhogo and Man. A traditional trading centre (yams, cassava, cattle, and sheep) among the Muslim… …
27Africa — /af ri keuh/, n. 1. a continent S of Europe and between the Atlantic and Indian oceans. 551,000,000; ab. 11,700,000 sq. mi. (30,303,000 sq. km). adj. 2. African. * * * I Second largest continent on Earth. It is bounded by the Mediterranean Sea,… …
28Agriculture and Food Supplies — ▪ 2007 Introduction Bird flu reached Europe and Africa, and concerns over BSE continued to disrupt trade in beef. An international vault for seeds was under construction on an Arctic island. Stocks of important food fish species were reported… …
29Virus — A microorganism smaller than a bacteria, which cannot grow or reproduce apart from a living cell. A virus invades living cells and uses their chemical machinery to keep itself alive and to replicate itself. It may reproduce with fidelity or with… …
30Le mouton de la ferme — Mouton Pour les articles homonymes, voir Mouton (homonymie) …