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Definition of Broncho
1. Noun. An unbroken or imperfectly broken mustang.
Definition of Broncho
1. n. A native or a Mexican horse of small size.
Definition of Broncho
1. Noun. (alternative spelling of bronco) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Broncho
1. bronco [n -CHOS] - See also: bronco
Lexicographical Neighbors of Broncho
Literary usage of Broncho
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Principles and Practice of Medicine: Designed for the Use of by William Osler, Thomas McCrae (1912)
"The histológica! changes in the aspiration or deglutition broncho-pneu- monia
... The organisms most commonly found in broncho-pneumonia are Micrococcus ..."
2. The Diseases of Infancy and Childhood: For the Use of Students and by Luther Emmett Holt, John Howland (1911)
"Tuberculous broncho-pneumonia will be discussed in the chapter devoted to ...
The term broncho-pneumonia describes a lesion rather than a disease, ..."
3. The Practitioner by Gale Group, ProQuest Information and Learning Company (1891)
"The time-honoured view that, in broncho-pneumonia, the histological appearances
are the result of inflammation especially affecting the epithelial lining of ..."
4. Physical Diagnosis by Richard Clarke Cabot (1919)
"(c) broncho-Vesicular Breathing in Health. As indicated by its name, this type
of breathing is intermediate between the two just described, hence the terms ..."
5. The Diseases of children by James Frederic Goodhart (1899)
"It must also be said that it is in whooping-cough that broncho-pneumonia finds its
... In the recognition of broncho-pneumonia there is usually but little ..."
6. New Voices: An Introduction to Contemporary Poetry by Marguerite Ogden Bigelow Wilkinson (1922)
"Robert Frost THE broncho THAT WOULD NOT BE BROKEN A little colt—broncho, loaned
to the farm To be broken in time without fury or harm, Yet black crows flew ..."
7. Songs of the Cattle Trail and Cow Camp by John Avery Lomax (1919)
"broncho VERSUS BICYCLE THE first that we saw of the high-tone tramp War over thar
at our Pecos camp; He war comin' down the Santa Fe trail Astride of a ..."