cattle trail

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cattle trail

Cowboys guide a herd of cattle along a dusty cattle trail.

Definition

Noun: - A historical route used for driving livestock, especially cattle, to market or railheads: A "cattle trail" specifically refers to a path or route established for the purpose of moving herds of cattle over long distances, typically during the 19th century in regions like the American West.

Usage
  • The term is used to describe specific, named historical routes.
  • It is a compound noun; the primary meaning is tied to the combined concept of "cattle" and "trail."
Examples
  • Noun:
    • The Chisholm Trail was a famous cattle trail from Texas to Kansas.
    • Ranchers used the cattle trail to move their herds north to the railroads.
Advanced Usage
  • Historical Context: The term is almost exclusively used in a historical context, referring to the era of open-range cattle drives.
    • The era of the great cattle trails ended with the spread of railroads and fencing.
Variants and Related Words
  • Trail (n): A path through a countryside, mountain, or forest area.
  • Cattle drive (n): The act of moving a herd of cattle along a trail.
  • Drovers' trail: Another term for a trail used by livestock drivers (drovers).
Synonyms
  • Droving trail
  • Stock route (a more general, modern term for routes used to move livestock)
Related Phrases/Idioms

(This term is a specific historical compound and is not typically used in idiomatic expressions or phrasal verbs.)

cattle trail

Cowboys guide a herd of cattle along a dusty cattle trail.

Noun
  1. a trail over which cattle were driven to market