livestock
/ˈlaɪvstɒk/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈlaɪvstɑːk/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈlīv-ˌstäk/ (ame, mw)
livestock — noun
1. Cows, sheep, chickens, and other animals that people raise on a farm to sell or
Cows, sheep, chickens, and other animals that people raise on a farm to sell or use for things like meat, milk, eggs, or wool.
Ravi spent every morning feeding the livestock before heading to school.
collocation: feed the livestock
The Han family earns most of their income from selling livestock at the weekly market.
collocation: sell livestock
A severe winter storm killed nearly half of the livestock on the mountain farm.
Local farmers brought their livestock to the county fair for judging and prizes.
Insurance for livestock is a major expense for large ranches in the region.
- cattle
refers specifically to cows and bulls, not to chickens, sheep, or pigs
- farm animals
a more everyday, informal term; livestock has a commercial or agricultural tone
- stock
shorter term used in farming and business contexts, but can be confused with financial stock
- herds
focuses on groups of grazing animals, not poultry or pigs
文法句型
livestock + verb (singular/plural depending on collective interpretation)
用法筆記
Always used as an uncountable noun. Do not add -s for the plural. Refers to farm animals as a collective group; an individual animal is called a cow, sheep, chicken, etc., not 'a livestock'. Can take either a singular or a plural verb depending on whether the group is thought of as a single unit ('The livestock is kept in the barn') or as individuals ('The livestock are grazing in different fields').