Rooster \Roost"er\, n. The male of the domestic fowl; a cock. [U.S.]
Nor, when they [the Skinners and Cow Boys] wrung the neck of a rooster, did they trouble their heads whether he crowed for Congress or King George. --W. Irving.
Driggers faced a possible $300 fine and the rooster faced a possible death sentence.
Foreign buyers have been known to pay $3,000 a rooster for international cockfighting derbies in the Philippines or Guam.
Alongside a chapel at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary in Kentucky stands a brass sculpture of a crowing rooster - an ancient Christian symbol of warning.
It's All in the Timing Pundits who use pure coincidence To claim that their counsel is wise Remind us of the rooster's claim That his crowing caused the sunrise.
She won first place in the rooster imitation contest for children under 13.
In 1783, Etienne Montgolfier launched a duck, a sheep and a rooster aboard a hot-air balloon at Versailles in France.
Michael Besile carried a live red rooster, the Aristide trademark "coq qualite" - "quality rooster." "It's going to be better now.
Michael Besile carried a live red rooster, the Aristide trademark "coq qualite" - "quality rooster." "It's going to be better now.