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mozo

n. A male servant, especially an attendant to a bullfighter.

Usage examples of "mozo".

Accidents still happen, but when you have a Mozo to look after you, those are rare.

He could have let the Mozo do the driving, but, gosh darn it, driving your whole family around in the big old family vehicle was one of the joys of fatherhood.

The Mozo arrived disassembled in a cubic crate that measured about a meter on a side.

She swiveled her chair and looked at the Mozo, and a thought occurred to her.

Halperin asked, and got an odd smouldering look, probably for mocking a mere mozo by employing the formal construction.

They went up into the mountains a week later with the mozo and two of the vaqueros and after the vaqueros had turned in in their blankets he and Rawlins sat by the fire on the rim of the mesa drinking coffee.

A hoarse mozo would bawl out something to an acquaintance in the ranks, or a woman would shriek suddenly the word Adios!

In that posture, with a ragged town mozo holding his horse by the bridle, he rode triumphantly across the Plaza to the door of the Intendencia.

However, Don Pepe continued, the mozo who brought the letter said that Don Carlos Gould was alive, and so far unmolested.

The mozo from the town, having fastened his horse to a wooden post before the door, was telling them the news of Sulaco as the blackened gourd of the decoction passed from hand to hand.

He listened to the excited vapourings of the mozo without misgivings, without surprise, without any active sentiment whatever.

The pouting, spoiled Camerista and the head mozo of the Casa Gould had been married for some years now.

And in another ten minutes Billie was facing the mayor over a plate of steaming soup, while a mozo stood at his back waiting to serve the leg of a twenty-five pound turkey.

Two mozos de campo, picturesque in great hats, with spurred bare heels, in white embroidered calzoneras, leather jackets and striped ponchos, rode ahead with carbines across their shoulders, swaying in unison to the pace of the horses.

When he rode up to the gerente's house that morning he was accompanied by four friends and by a retinue of mozos and two packanimals saddled with hardwood kiacks, one empty, the other carrying their noon provisions.