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South American cowboy
Answer for the clue "South American cowboy ", 7 letters:
llanero
Alternative clues for the word llanero
Word definitions for llanero in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A plainsman; a South American cattle-herder or cowboy, especially in Venezuela and Colombia.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Llanero \Lla*ne"ro\, n. [Sp. Amer.] One of the inhabitants of the llanos of South America.
Usage examples of llanero.
He advanced between Senores Fuentes and Gamacho at the head of his llaneros, who had accomplished the feat of crossing the Paramos of the Higuerota in a snow-storm.
Spies were set to watch the daring llanero, and after some days they informed their leaders that Paez had gone out unarmed, and that there was a good opportunity to seize his weapons as a preliminary to his arrest.
June, 1821, Bolivar had about sixteen hundred infantry, a thousand or more of them being British, and three thousand of llanero cavalry under Paez.
Apaches Tejuas, Apaches Vaqueros, Apaches Faraones, Apaches Llaneros, Apaches Lipanes, and a host of others, of whom the Spanish missionaries and colonists had little or no knowledge except that derived, alas, from predatory raids on the peaceable Indians among whom they were established.
As a consequence, an entire squadron of Llaneros, men who lived in the saddle, and were at home only on the plain, deserted on finding themselves on foot.
When the act became known to the llaneros they proclaimed Paez their general, and were ready to follow him to the death.
Though not gaining the renown of Bolivar, and doubtless incapable of heading an army and conducting a campaign, as a cavalry leader he was indispensable, and to him and his gallant llaneros was largely due the winning of liberty.
Father Corbelan was unexpectedly offering them a refuge from Pedrito Montero with his llaneros allied to Senores Fuentes and Gamacho with their armed rabble.
The desire to be on the spot early was the real cause of the celebrated ride over the mountains with some two hundred llaneros, an enterprise of which the dangers had not appeared at first clearly to his impatience.
As he rode at the head of his llaneros he regretted that there were so few of them.
A terrible fire, by the light of which I saw the last of the fighting, the llaneros flying, the Nationals throwing their arms down, and the miners of San Tome, all Indians from the Sierra, rolling by like a torrent to the sound of pipes and cymbals, green flags flying, a wild mass of men in white ponchos and green hats, on foot, on mules, on donkeys.
The Llaneros lived in the foothills and upper elevations of the Sangre de Cristo range.
The llaneros had driven the large herds south where they would have better winter feed, they said and then they had vanished.
The llaneros had driven the large herds south — where they would have better winter feed, they said — and then they had vanished.
The llaneros — the men of the Venezuelan plains — supplied him with a brilliant cavalry, but not with the material for permanent conquest.