corral



corral someone or something

Fig. to herd someone or something into a corral or other enclosed space. It took the cowboys two hours to corral the mustangs. The nursery school teacher herded the kids off the playground and corraled them in the classroom.

corral dust

n. nonsense, lies, and exaggeration. (A euphemism for bullshit.) The way Judy handles the corral dust, she must be running for political office.
See also: corral, dust

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Yiorgos-Greek
Padmavati-Hinduism
TamarTAH-mahr (English), TAY-mahr (English)Hebrew, Georgian, Biblical, Biblical Hebrew
JiŘÍ-Czech
HilleviHIL-le-vee (Swedish), HEEL-le-vee (Finnish)Swedish, Finnish
Christinkris-TEEN (Swedish, German)Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, German