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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Picador

Picador \Pic`a*dor"\, n. [Sp.] A horseman armed with a lance, who in a bullfight receives the first attack of the bull, and excites him by picking him without attempting to kill him.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
picador

1797, from Spanish picador, literally "pricker," from picar "to pierce," from Vulgar Latin *piccare "to pierce" (see pike (n.2)). He pricks the bull with a lance to provoke it.

Wiktionary
picador

n. (context bullfighting English) A lancer mounted on horseback who assists a matador.

WordNet
picador

n. the horseman who pricks the bull with a lance early in the bullfight to goad the bull and to make it keep its head low

Wikipedia
Picador (imprint)

frames|right|160px|Picador logo

Picador is an imprint of Pan Macmillan in the United Kingdom and Australia and of Macmillan Publishing in the United States. Both companies are owned by Georg von Holtzbrinck Publishing Group.

Picador was launched in the UK in 1972 with the aim of publishing outstanding international writing in paperback. In 1990, Picador started publishing its own hardcovers.

Picador authors have included Jonathan Franzen, Michael Chabon, Angela Carter, Thomas Pynchon, Raj Patel, Jon Ronson, Pankaj Mishra, Bret Easton Ellis and Salman Rushdie.

Picador (disambiguation)

A picador most commonly refers to one of the six members of the cuadrilla in a Spanish bullfight.

Picador may also mean:

  • Picador (imprint), a publishing brand name used in the United Kingdom
  • The Picadore, a march written by American composer John Philip Sousa in 1889
  • Picador painting, probably the oldest extant picture by Pablo Picasso
  • The Picador (film), a 1932 French film
Picador

A picador (; pl. picadores) is one of the pair of horsemen in a Spanish bullfight that jab the bull with a lance. They perform in the tercio de varas which is the first of the three stages in a Spanish bullfight.

Usage examples of "picador".

A scientist activated the transfer routine, and moments later Picador found himself to be once again Arnold Miller, an American gymnast with a team currently touring in the Otherwhere version of France.

The sleeping pills made sure that Arnold Miller was unconscious by midnight when Picador was recalled to report, and he was able to feed and exercise his own body, shower and shave, without risk of a suddenly restored analog panicking at the other end.

How Colonel Elson had obtained them or why a radio astronomer living in a different reality should be a target were questions that Picador had been trained to exclude from his considerations.

Matching the home number against the Vaughans listed in the directory gave him the address, which from the map that Picador had bought at the airport, was located in what looked like a residential area about three miles away.

Polygon buildings, Picador was recalled on schedule and reported that Vaughan had left Manchester to fly to the U.

The work of the picador was done, the temper and the weaknesses of the bull discovered: now Kupka the matador would enter the ring.

We thought highly of one, but he was disqualified after a preliminary background investigation turned up the fact that he had had a youthful dalliance with a picador in Seville.

Next he checked the casualty graph and noted that the squads had already exceeded twenty-five percent loss, but they seemed content to continue to picador their massive bull.

There is the story, for instance, of the cattleman who saw the bull-fight in Juarez, and when the bull gored the first horse the cowpuncher rose in the crowd and sent a bullet through the picador to square the deal.

He made Solitario advance step by quick step, while he pointed his lance not at the heavily padded old horses but at the picadors themselves.

The next scene introduces us to a masquerade where are choruses of quasi-gypsies, matadors, and picadors,--sufficiently characteristic.

When the trumpets saluted the entrance of the picadors, Isabella moaned aloud and pressed her knuckles against her teeth, for she had been dreading the horses.

There is the story, for instance, of the cattleman who saw the bull-fight in Juarez, and when the bull gored the first horse the cowpuncher rose in the crowd and sent a bullet through the picador to square the deal.

Close enough to see into the eyes of the toro they were black and blank with stupidity and rage Luis vaulted aside, nimble as wind, and drove the sticks into the crimson gash opened by the picador.

These men hung their heads, making Luis think of a bull when he and the picadors were done with it.