sussex
IPA/ˈsʌs.ɪks/
KK[sˈʌsɪks]IPA/ˈsʌs.ɪks/
sussex — noun
1. a dark-brown kind of cattle first developed in Sussex, in southern England, and
1.名詞C1
釋義
a dark-brown kind of cattle first developed in Sussex, in southern England, and usually raised for beef.
例句
Imran keeps Sussex cattle on rough grass behind the old stone barn.
collocation: keep Sussex cattle
At the farm show, Valentina brushed the Sussex cow before the judge arrived.
show-ring use: Sussex cow
Kwame chose Sussex calves because they grew well through the wet winter.
After milking, Esme led the quiet Sussex cow back to the grassy field.
The buyer paid more for Daniel's Sussex bull than for the other calves.
文法句型
a Sussex cow
Sussex cattle
keep Sussex cattle
用法筆記
Usually capitalized when it names the breed. Writers often add cow, bull, or cattle after Sussex when the breed meaning might not be obvious.
常見錯誤
❌The report says Sussex grows well on grass.
✅The report says Sussex cattle grow well on grass.
💡Adding cattle makes it clear that Sussex names the breed here, not the English county.