Citations:paw up

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English citations of paw up

1735 1757 1894 1898 1905 1907 1993
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  • 1735, William Ellis, The Practice of Farming and Husbandry in all Sorts of Soils, according to the latest Improvements, page 166:
    In Chalks and Sands, this Method is not practiſed at all, for here the Sheep will either paw it up, or pull it up with their Mouths in ſuch looſe, ſhort Ground []
  • 1757, The Patriot, Or a Call to Glory; a Poem in Two Books, book I, page 7:
    See the bold horſe, accouter'd for the fight,
    His rolling eye-balls ſparkling like the ſtars;
    Champing the bit, and pawing up the ground,
    And ſweating briny dew from ev'ry pore;
  • 1894, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Footprints of Four Centuries, International Publishing Co., page 706:
    They break ranks and scatter, pawing up the hot sand or loose grass, and flinging it, hoof-load after hoof-load, over their backs.
  • 1898, Ellsworth Douglass, “Felipe's Experiments”, in The Wide World Magazine, volume I, George Newnes, page 410:
    The bull hesitated, seemingly awed by his boldness. He bellowed at him a little, and pawed up the earth with one hoof.
  • 1905, Cornelia Hickman, “An Alaskan Journey with Reindeer”, in Mary Mapes Dodge, editor, St. Nicholas Magazine, volume XXXII, Scribner's, page 357:
    We heard the hoofs of Uncle Ben beating on the pulk's side as he pawed up the snow in his efforts to get at us []
  • 1907, Norman H. Cromwell, “Ezra Bogg's Moose Hunt”, in Caspar Whitney, editor, The Outing Magazine, volume L, Outing Publishing Company, page 159:
    But jest then th’ bull pawed up a wagonload of dirt and let out a beller that purty nigh loosened th’ fillin’ in my hind teeth.