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Example sentences for "coop"

Lexicographically close words:
coonskin; coont; coonted; coontit; coontry; cooped; cooperage; cooperate; cooperated; cooperates
  1. Hang her they most certainly would if the facts got out, or coop her for life in a mad-house, which would be infinitely worse than hanging.

  2. It was a large new coop and built of strong material that made it very heavy.

  3. So at last the chicken coop was settled, and not a hen was missing.

  4. And he marched away to the flying machine and got aboard with the coop and Buttsy in his arms.

  5. He half fell over the coop which contained the Shanghai rooster.

  6. He's getting fat and sassy right now out in his coop behind the bungalow.

  7. Washington White built a traveling coop of very light but strong material for his pet Shanghai, and then announced himself as ready to depart for the Arctic Circle.

  8. What did you let him out of his coop for?

  9. The coop for a hen and chickens should be so constructed that they will have plenty of fresh air at night.

  10. The coop and pen should be moved before the grass becomes much trampled and soiled.

  11. The ideal way is to coop them on grass, or in a garden where they can get a great deal of green food and worms.

  12. Coop for hen and chicks, to be used without run] =Coops for broods.

  13. The early goslings with hen mothers should be placed on sod ground where the grass is fine and soft, in coops such as are used for little chickens, with a small pen in front of each coop to keep them from wandering away.

  14. Then, if the weather is fine, the hen and her brood may be taken at once to a coop out of doors, but if it is cold or stormy, the little chicks are better indoors.

  15. While the hens are with the chickens the food is placed where the hen confined to the coop can get her share.

  16. A shelter should be provided for protection from the sun, and a roomy coop with a dry floor to keep them in at night.

  17. Photograph from the Bureau of Animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture)] It is the common practice to confine the mother to a coop from which the little turkeys can go to a small pen placed in front of it.

  18. They are expert flycatchers, and if there is anything in their coop to attract flies, they will get a great many of them.

  19. Neat pigeon house and fly] When it is desired to mate a particular male and female, the best way is to place them one in each side of a small coop with a wire partition across the middle.

  20. This coop should be put where they cannot see other pigeons.

  21. It is in the form of an air-fan, with a pointed nozzle, which is put just within the coop at night, when the birds are all within.

  22. The powder is already in a compartment made for it, and by the turning of a handle, it is driven through the nozzle, and the air within the coop charged with it.

  23. O how strong they are, and well fitted to keep geese in a mew or coop to fatten them!

  24. All the ill feathered devils in my coop are not worth a single black foot.

  25. Jane Coop took up a corner of the big white apron she insisted upon wearing, and pleated it between her fingers as she told her grace everything with a surprising lucidity.

  26. Jane Coop was miserable too; so was the bulldog, and, through a certain unconfessed and indefinable vigilance they both felt called upon to exercise in behalf of their beloved mistress, were distinctly nervy.

  27. There was no haste about Jane Coop as she knelt beside him.

  28. Why did Jane Coop fear as the others feared, and why did her bonny face go suddenly white?

  29. Jane Coop was maid, adviser and buffer to the girl whom she loved more than anyone on earth.

  30. Jane Coop stopped dead at the outer edge of the colonnade.

  31. Jane Coop sniffed as she tucked in the bed-clothes and kissed her child good-night.

  32. Jane Coop as she tied the ribbons of the simple, heelless, white leather shoes in which the girl always preferred to dance.

  33. Jane Coop dropped a curtsey to the gentry and stood just inside the door, up in arms, ready to fight anyone at the first word of condemnation of her young mistress.

  34. At the end of the story of the dream, Jane Coop rose.

  35. She teased Jane Coop the next morning as, perilously perched on donkey-back, she headed the little procession which wended its way through the stretches of earth which later would give a harvest of corn and sweet-scented flowering bean.

  36. Jane Coop had no use for knights who left the field of combat; and as for the tales which were duly carried to her of an Arabian chief who followed her young mistress in the desert and sent her bunches of flowers and such-like trash, well!

  37. Nor must we forget to mention a hen-coop of very reverend antiquity that stood in the farther corner of the garden, not a great way from the fountain.

  38. The coop is divided by a central transverse partition into two compartments, which are subdivided by transverse partitions composed of slats, and held in place by a dowel pin at the bottom and by a pin at the top.

  39. A cord is attached to the top of the coop frame, and runs over the pulley, and is attached to a counterweight.

  40. Grooves are also made in the ends and central partition of the coop to receive these sliding partitions.

  41. The frame of the coop is placed on a standard, at the top of which is placed a pulley.

  42. This invention consists of a coop adjustable vertically on a standard, and provided with removable partitions and doors for convenience in cleansing.

  43. The hens, whose winter-quarters were in a coop by the stove, politely clucked their thanks and took as good a view as their space permitted of the man to whom their good qualities were thus set forth.

  44. The hens cackled uneasily in their coop as Franzl left the room, and the geese in the barn added their note of remonstrance when the sleigh flew by.

  45. But how is one to know an Opportunity when it comes in a chicken-coop disguised as a Wild-cat?

  46. I'd like to see the King of Germany hisself coop me up seven nights in the week an' me stand for it.

  47. I'd rather live in a coop in the city, where a girl can have some life, than in a palace out in this hole.

  48. I can't breathe no more in that coop up-stairs.

  49. For the first month, the confinement of the mother under a coop is better than too much liberty.

  50. A dry, sunny corner in the garden will be the best place to coop them with their bantam hen.

  51. A few pieces of board laid under and about the coop are useful; sometimes rubbing the leg with spirit will bring back the circulation.

  52. In quiet grassy places, it is scarcely necessary to coop the hen at all.

  53. Magpultri kug kabutangan sa mga manuk, I’ll make a coop to shelter the chickens.

  54. It's so pretty and cunning, and it has the loveliest garden and chicken-coop and everything.

  55. Oh, I see; that's the chicken-coop you spoke of.

  56. A little boy came into our coop and began most earnestly addressing me in Chinese.

  57. A red snake discovered in a coop with a hen and clutch of chicks.

  58. The coop had been deemed snake-proof, but the slim snake had easily passed in at the half-inch mesh wire-netting in front.

  59. I'm down in the basement of the Corrugated Buildin' interviewin' the assistant superintendent in his little coop of an office.

  60. Care of course should be taken to see the bars in front of the coop are not sufficiently far apart to allow the duck to escape.

  61. The young ducks are now three or four days old, and have got into the way of running out of the coop and into the run for their food and water.

  62. In the meantime, the English vessels were preparing for action: the clearing of their lumbered decks was the occasion of many a coop of fowls, or pig of the true China breed, exchanging their destiny for a watery grave.

  63. Coop answered coop, in variety of discord, while the poulterer walked round and round to supply the wants of so many hundreds committed to his charge.

  64. It come to me it's best to humor him, and I go into the coop again.

  65. But did that old madman think that he could coop her up here forever?

  66. In case these are not easily obtainable, roof the loft and coop with ordinary boards, using another lot of boards to cover the cracks between the first layer (Fig.

  67. A Pigeon-Loft and Bantam-Coop which is capable of holding with comfort enough pets to gladden the heart of any healthy boy.

  68. It is now only necessary to nail on your sidings, and your loft-coop is finished, all but the doors and windows.


  69. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "coop" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    arena; beleaguer; beset; besiege; blockade; bound; brooder; cage; can; check; cincture; clink; cloister; close; compass; confine; constrain; contain; container; cooler; coop; cordon; cork; corral; court; courtyard; crib; detain; encircle; enclave; enclose; enclosure; encompass; enshrine; envelop; fence; field; fold; freezer; gaol; ground; hedge; hell; hold; house; hovel; immure; impound; imprison; incarcerate; include; inhibit; jail; jug; keep; kennel; limbo; list; lockup; pale; park; pen; penitentiary; pocket; pound; purgatory; quadrangle; quarantine; rail; restrain; restrict; shackle; square; stable; stall; stir; stockade; surround; theater; wall; wrap; detain; encircle; enclave; enclose; enclosure; encompass; enshrine; envelop; fence; field; fold; freezer; gaol; ground; hedge; hell; hold; house; hovel; immure; impound; imprison; incarcerate; include; inhibit; jail; jug; keep; kennel; limbo; list; lockup; pale; park; pen; penitentiary; pocket; pound; purgatory; quadrangle; quarantine; rail; restrain; restrict; shackle; square; stable; stall; stir; stockade; surround; theater; wall; wrap