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packhorse Meaning in Bengali







packhorse's Usage Examples:

A packhorse, pack horse, or sumpter refers to a horse, mule, donkey, or pony used to carry goods on its back, usually in sidebags or panniers.


packhorse bridge is a bridge intended to carry packhorses (horses loaded with sidebags or panniers) across a river or stream.


Typically a packhorse bridge.


rock lobster, marine crayfish, New South Wales spiny lobster, packhorse crayfish, packhorse lobster, sea crayfish, smooth-tailed crayfish and Sydney crayfish.


Main features are the packhorse bridge over the Potton Brook, the adjacent ford, and the Grade I listed.


Estate passing Holnicote and through Allerford, where it passes under a packhorse bridge of medieval origin.


One of the village's main attractions is the much-photographed packhorse bridge.


older than the now larger town of Newmarket and includes a 15th-century packhorse bridge spanning the River Kennett.


The stone packhorse bridge crosses the River Avill at the southern end of the village, below.


around a village green with a medieval cattle-pound and an old stone packhorse bridge across the beck.


The 17th century packhorse Malmsmead Bridge crosses Badgworthy Water, alongside an even older ford.


It is a narrow stone packhorse bridge, on the southern outskirts of Dunster, with two arches over the.


its confluence with the River Sett at Bowden Bridge (a Grade II listed packhorse bridge).


A manor house, shepherd, travelling vendor with his packhorse, lords and ladies, hunting scenes, milkmaids, millers, water mills and.


At the boundary with Jacobstowe stands an ancient packhorse bridge over the Okement river.


north east of Beckford Bridge over the River Yarty, which is the oldest packhorse bridge in East Devon.



Synonyms:

workhorse; sumpter; pack animal;

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