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Definition of Cowbarn
1. Noun. A barn for cows.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cowbarn
Literary usage of Cowbarn
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. School Education (1907)
"But few alterations were made; the cowbarn, with its connecting covered walk,
being used for a wood- ... The other outside door of the former cowbarn was ..."
2. Neurosyphilis by Elmer Ernest Southard, Harry Caesar Solomon (1917)
"Bachmann had been found by the police, working in front of a cowbarn without the
consent or ... Bachmann had, in fact, spent the night in the cowbarn and ..."
3. Susanna Shakespeare: A Romantic Comedy in Four Acts by Eleanor Prescott Hammond (1916)
"I will see the house clean ere I befoul the cowbarn with thee!—Susanna! ...
And he bides in the cowbarn. HAMNET: Because he would not the blue room. ..."
4. Preventive Medicine and Hygiene by Milton Joseph Rosenau, George Chandler Whipple, John William Trask, Thomas William Salmon (1921)
"Unsanitary surroundings of a cowbarn 765 78. Conditions under which it is difficult
to cleanse and disinfect milk bottles and milk pails 773 79. ..."
5. A Text-book of General Bacteriology by Edwin Oakes Jordan (1921)
"The skin of the cow, the hands of the milker, the vessels used for collection,
and the dust of the cowbarn all contribute their quota to the number found ..."
6. Shakers of Ohio: Fugitive Papers Concerning the Shakers of Ohio, with by John Patterson MacLean (1907)
"... a cowbarn 40 x 168, were built. On January ist, commenced making broom handles,
and in February commenced running the saw mill day and night. ..."