¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cowpokes
1. cowpoke [n] - See also: cowpoke
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cowpokes
Literary usage of Cowpokes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Command and Control for War and Peace by DIANE Publishing Company, Thomas P. Coakley (1994)
"Based on what you've learned about the cowpokes' performance this season, you've
told your defensive line coach to spend a lot of practice time on the blitz ..."
2. Command and Control for War and Peace by Thomas P. Coakley, DIANE Publishing Company (1992)
"Based on what you've learned about the cowpokes' performance this season, you've
told your defensive line coach to spend a lot of practice time on the blitz ..."
3. Island Song Lyrics Volume 2 by Larry W. Jones (2004)
"Cowboy Island Home (1 1/06/2002) (#548) cowpokes know a place where they want to
spend their days I know such a place where the sun shines on the bays ..."
4. Useful Knowledge: The American Philosophical Society Millennium Program by Alexander G. Bearn, American Philosophical Society (1999)
"... in covered wagon trains, and federally subsidized railroads than it is the
story of isolated mountain men, single explorers, or lonely cowpokes. ..."
5. The Catskills Alive! by Francine Silverman (2003)
"... Inexpensive Looking for a place to keep your little cowpokes happy? (Read
happy kids, happy parents.) Family- owned and operated since 1971, ..."
6. Western Canada by Paul-Eric Dumontier, Jennifer McMorran, Pierre Longnus (2004)
"One of the most amusing crowd- pleasers is mutton busting where young cowpokes
are strapped to sheep and sent flying around the corral. ..."
7. He Usually Lived with a Female: The Life of a California Newspaperman by George Garrigues (2006)
"Soon carpenters, painters, grips, electricians, cowpokes and second- and third-rate
actors crowded the little town, which enticed them with wide-open ..."
8. Georgia and the Carolinas by Norman Renouf, Kathy Renouf (1999)
"A host of other somewhat less authentic enticements, in the form of cowpokes and
gunslingers, Indians, can-can girls at the Palace Saloon, ..."