It is getting pretty noisy round here right enough as one of neighbours up the hill seems to have invested in a cockerel. |
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It is hoped that the cockerel will suitably adapt his behaviour to the surroundings in which he will find himself. |
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This is a real country garden, with hens running riot in the orchard and a cockerel lording it on the compost heap. |
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The only other animal to be seen was a cockerel, to which one presumed was attached some monetary value. |
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The women then set off like a pack of hounds in full cry after this cockerel. |
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In a daring attempt to escape the chop, four battery hens and a cockerel fled from the back of a lorry taking them to an abattoir. |
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Characteristic of Kuzmichev's fine enameling is the small tazza in Plate X, which incorporates a cockerel leaning against the stem. |
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The Glarus side overfed their cockerel to encourage him to display his gratitude by heralding dawn early. |
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It may be served with any first courses and goes best with Alsatian specialities such as sauerkraut, cockerel in Riesling or a wintner's pie. |
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It can be agreed that the player or team that loses most games has to pay a forfeit, such as crawling under the table and crowing like a cockerel. |
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If you do not run a cockerel with your hens, you should arrange to get hold of one for a short period. |
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Walker explained to me that he had been raising the young cockerel from a chick since last September, and this is his first year showing his birds. |
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On the top of the monument there is often a cockerel to symbolise the homeland. |
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Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF, whose party symbol is a black cockerel, is crowing loud and hard. |
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There are some recipes which specifically call for a cockerel and of these the best known are the Scottish cock-a-leekie and the French coq au vin. |
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Piece inspired by naivism, this cockerel is made of parts of sheet metal with a galvanized painted finish. |
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A creature in a tree, half-boy, half-hedgehog, plays the bagpipes, mounted on a cockerel. |
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They are easy to spot, wearing T-shirts with a common logo: a circle drawn fast and freehand to symbolize the globe, and two lines that cross it to indicate the equator and the meridian, where a cockerel stands proud. |
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Indeed Lawler believes he has found an explanation for the legend of the basilisk, a terrifying serpent said to hatch from an egg laid by a cockerel. |
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Mr President, every visitor to the Member State that Mr Barroso knows best learns that Portugal's national symbol represents the cockerel that got up from the dinner table and crowed to save the life of a condemned man. |
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It is therefore important to keep a good fertile cockerel with the hens. |
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Legend has it that the cantonal boundary was marked by two runners, one starting in Altdorf and one in Glarus at the first dawn crow of the cockerel. |
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The design consists of lozenge-shaped cartouches formed from individual flowers, these enclose octagons with red, yellow and blue outlines and a central cockerel, facing left. |
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Its emblem, the cockerel, gave a national reference. |
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As you people know, the emblem of our beautiful kingdom is the cockerel. |
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A merchant, a may-pole, a man or a mackerel, A crab or a crevis, a crane or a cockerel? |
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He had made arrangements with the cockerel to call him three-quarters of an hour earlier in the mornings instead of half an hour. |
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Since the 1921 FA Cup final the Tottenham Hotspur crest has featured a cockerel. |
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The law of averages says it will be one hen and one cockerel. |
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Soon after the First World War, the cockerel badge was added to the shirt. |
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The floodlights were upgraded in 1957 which required the cockerel to be moved from the West Stand to the East and then in 1961 floodlight pylons were installed. |
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