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the cinch
noun
A simple saddle girth used in Mexico.
Exact(46)
2. From left: The Cinch, a thin-walled glass tumbler is $6.95 at Crate & Barrel, (800) 967-6696 or www.crateandbarrel.com.
Talk story about the cinch belt or waist-nipper and visit to King Fashionable Belt Company, 25 West 36 St., the country's largest manufacturers.
After Versailles, it was an escape like no other available, a "house in the country" where the cinch of rules and expectations could be somewhat loosened.
Most Friday evenings around 7, Billy Axelrod, 29, tosses on a red Stop AIDS windbreaker and walks into a bar like the Giraffe, the Cinch or Reflections.
For some of us, accustomed to English tack, the Western gear was bulky and unfamiliar, the cinch a challenge requiring close supervision from Skip and his crew.
"He would saddle her horse all right, but he was tempted to cut the cinch nearly through so it would break during her ride and spill the haughty flame-haired beauty in the dirt, where he thought she belonged".
Similar(13)
In Wyoming I took off the cinches and stirrups.
Mold began to turn up on the cinches.
Pupil dilation — the cinching and uncinching of the muscle around the iris — is manipulated with a white L.E.D., shone into the eye at differing degrees of brightness.
Fold the cinches and the stirrups over the seat of the saddle.
Rock the saddle back and forth into position and unfold the cinches and stirrup.
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