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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a yoke of" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to describe a pair or a set of items that are bound together, often in a metaphorical sense.
Example: "The farmers worked together, sharing a yoke of responsibilities to ensure the harvest was successful."
Alternatives: "a pair of" or "a set of".
Exact(13)
Cimon urged compliance, comparing Athens and Sparta to a yoke of oxen working together for the good of Greece.
The dresses he designed were in white cotton jersey, often with fraying garlands of lace or tulle around the side, or with a yoke of seed pearls.
Derived from Middle English aker (from Old English aecer) and akin to Latin ager ("field"), the acre had one origin in the typical area that could be plowed in one day with a yoke of oxen pulling a wooden plow.
[The foreigners] chain up the Muslims, put around their necks a yoke of servitude, debase them, humiliate their lineage … sometimes they call them savages and sometimes regard them as hard-hearted and cruel and finally consider them insane animals".
It is striking that both he and Mr. Lagerfeld drew on medievalism, though at Chanel the allusions were more subtle: a yoke of golden embroidery, say, on a black tunic dress, or a high-collared coat in ecclesiastical scarlet.
The committee in charge of the festivities dug up a yoke of oxen for the traditional parade, and it turned out that the brutes were suffering from an odd, unhealthy condition known to drovers as "perishing hip and shoulders".
Similar(47)
David Politzer's funny, smart work "The Decider," includes two video monitors hung from a yoke on opposite sides of a weight bench.
I certainly hope this is not the case as whilst I approve of sensible regulation that ensures desired standards are adhered to I do not wish to place a yoke on the neck of creative free enterprise.
As a result, the follow-up album bears a heavy yoke of expectation, one lightened with the sure bet of M&S's constancy.
How a good yoke of bullocks at Stamford fair?" Shallow leaps from the subject of mortality to the price of cattle in Lincolnshire.
President Trump thanked China on Tuesday for help reining in North Korea as his administration moved to punish banking entities in China and elsewhere that have allegedly helped the rogue regime in Pyongyang get around a punishing yoke of economic sanctions.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com