gorer

English

Etymology

gore + -er

Noun

gorer (plural gorers)

  1. Someone or something that gores (typically an animal that gores other creatures).
    • 1873, Eugene O'Curry, On the Manners and Customs of the Ancient Irish - Volume 2, page 236:
      Sreng then explains that the name of the weapon is Craisech ; that they are " gorers of flesh", and " crushers of bones", and " breakers of shields", and that their thrust or stroke is death, or perpetual mutilation.
    • 1992, Roman A. Ohrenstein and Barry Gordon, Economic Analysis in Talmudic Literature: Rabbinic Thought in the Light of Modern Economics, E. J. Brill, page 12:
      An example of the talmudic reasoning in this regard is the case where the defendant sold an ox to the claimant, and the ox was found to be a gorer. The claimant now wants his money back on the ground that his purchase was a “mistaken transaction”. Most people, it can be allowed, acquire an ox for purposes of ploughing, and a gorer is not satisfactory for that purpose.
    • 1997, Fergus Kelly, Early Irish Farming: A Study Based Mainly on the Law-Texts of the 7th and 8th Centuries AD, page 507:
      These are the defects of a cow so that she is to be returned: (3) i.e. if her teats do not produce a full milk-yield, (4) if they are short, (5) if she is three-teated, (6) if she is a gorer, (7) if she is a kicker, (8) if she does not lover her calf...
    • 2013, Platte F. Clark, Bad Unicorn, →ISBN, page 8:
      “Well, at the very least, I'm sure we're known as stabbers and gorers?” Magar thought better of answering.

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