Definition of Anbury

1. n. A soft tumor or bloody wart on horses or oxen.

Definition of Anbury

1. Noun. (archaic) A wen or spongy wart on the legs or flanks of a horse. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Anbury

1. a soft wart on a horse [n ANBURIES]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Anbury

anatropous
anatropous ovule
anatropy
anatta
anattas
anatto
anattos
anatumomab mafenatox
anautogeny
anaxial
anaxon
anazoturia
anberries
anberry
anburies
anbury (current term)
ance
ancestor
ancestor worship
ancestored
ancestorial
ancestorially
ancestoring
ancestors
ancestour
ancestours
ancestral
ancestral chart
ancestral charts
ancestrall

Literary usage of Anbury

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and Literature for by Edmund Burke (1794)
"Loyal provincials embodied, and placed under the command of Governor Tryon. Expedition to Peek'i Kill. , To D anbury, under General Try on. ..."

2. Looters of the Public Domain by Stephen A. Douglas Puter, Horace Stevens (1907)
"Lewis E. anbury, the honest State Mineralogist of California, who has earned the everlasting gratitude of the miners of the Golden State by his fearless ..."

3. Palmer's Index to "The Times" NewspaperTimes (London, England) (1902)
"Mr. 11 anbury, 16 oH (i — Mû« Hobhouse, 14 n 5 A —— Holland, Boer Sympathizers in, 20 о 7 ft ' and the Concentration Campe, 3 о 5 о —— and the War, ..."

4. The Modern Husbandman, Or, The Practice of Farming by William Ellis (1744)
"As a Proof of this, they fay, that when they can get Clay, or Marie, to drefs their fandy Soil?, they are never troubled with the anbury, ..."

5. Life in Danbury: Being a Brief But Comprehensive Record of the Doings of a by James Montgomery Bailey (1873)
"LIFE AND MANNERS IN D anbury. THE women are shopping now. Nothing but the top-knot of the average clerk is visible above the towering counter, except when, ..."

6. The Signs of Old Lombard Street by Frederick George Hilton Price (1902)
"H anbury, Taylor, Lloyd and Bowman started as bankers here, and remained for the space of ten years. The site of it is now included in Messrs. ..."

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