breed - meaning and definition. What is breed
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What (who) is breed - definition

GROUP OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS WITH A DISTINCTIVE PHENOTYPE
Breeds; Bred; Breed (animal); Highbreed; Standardized breed; Formal breed; Formalized breed; Standard breed; Standardised breed; Formalised breed; Standardized breeds; Formal breeds; Animal breed
  • [[Braunvieh]], a dairy breed<ref>The Cattle Site: [https://www.thecattlesite.com/breeds/dairy/31/brown-swiss/ Breeds Brown Swiss] Retrieved 22 February 2021</ref> with high milk production and little [[milk fat]]

breed         
(breeds, breeding, bred)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
A breed of a pet animal or farm animal is a particular type of it. For example, terriers are a breed of dog.
...rare breeds of cattle...
Certain breeds are more dangerous than others.
N-COUNT
2.
If you breed animals or plants, you keep them for the purpose of producing more animals or plants with particular qualities, in a controlled way.
He lived alone, breeding horses and dogs...
These dogs are bred to fight.
VERB: V n, be V-ed to-inf
see also cross-breed
breeding
There is potential for selective breeding for better yields.
N-UNCOUNT
3.
When animals breed, they have babies.
Frogs will usually breed in any convenient pond...
The area now attracts over 60 species of breeding birds.
VERB: V, V-ing
breeding
During the breeding season the birds come ashore.
N-UNCOUNT: oft N n
4.
If you say that something breeds bad feeling or bad behaviour, you mean that it causes bad feeling or bad behaviour to develop.
If they are unemployed it's bound to breed resentment...
Violence breeds violence.
= create
VERB: V n, V n
5.
You can refer to someone or something as one of a particular breed of person or thing when you want to talk about what they are like.
Sue is one of the new breed of British women squash players who are making a real impact...
The new breed of walking holidays puts the emphasis on enjoyment, not endurance...
= strain
N-COUNT: usu sing, with supp
6.
7.
Someone who was born and bred in a place was born there and grew up there.
I was born and bred in the highlands...
PHRASE
8.
familiarity breeds contempt: see familiarity
Breed         
·vt To raise, as any kind of stock.
II. Breed ·vi To raise a breed; to get progeny.
III. Breed ·noun A number produced at once; a brood.
IV. Breed ·vt To produce or obtain by any natural process.
V. Breed ·vi To have birth; to be produced or multiplied.
VI. Breed ·noun Class; sort; kind;
- of men, things, or qualities.
VII. Breed ·vi To bear and nourish young; to reproduce or multiply itself; to be pregnant.
VIII. Breed ·vi To be formed in the parent or dam; to be generated, or to grow, as young before birth.
IX. Breed ·vt To take care of in infancy, and through the age of youth; to bring up; to nurse and foster.
X. Breed ·vt To give birth to; to be the native place of; as, a pond breeds fish; a northern country breeds stout men.
XI. Breed ·noun A race or variety of men or other animals (or of plants), perpetuating its special or distinctive characteristics by inheritance.
XII. Breed ·vt To Educate; to Instruct; to form by education; to Train;
- sometimes followed by up.
XIII. Breed ·vt To produce as offspring; to bring forth; to Bear; to Procreate; to Generate; to Beget; to Hatch.
XIV. Breed ·vt To Engender; to Cause; to Occasion; to Originate; to Produce; as, to breed a storm; to breed disease.
breed         
I. v. a.
1.
Bring forth, bear, conceive and bring to birth, beget, produce, engender.
2.
Nourish, nurture, foster, bring up, rear, raise.
3.
Discipline, educate, instruct, train, teach, school, bring up, nurture, rear.
4.
Originate, occasion, beget, produce, engender, generate, be the occasion of, give rise to, be the cause of.
II. v. n.
1.
Bring forth young, produce off-spring.
2.
Be born, be produced, have birth, arise, take rise, grow, develop.
3.
Raise live-stock, engage in breeding.
III. n.
Race (of animals), lineage, pedigree, progeny, stock, family, line, extraction, strain.

Wikipedia

Breed

A breed is a specific group of domestic animals having homogeneous appearance (phenotype), homogeneous behavior, and/or other characteristics that distinguish it from other organisms of the same species. In literature, there exist several slightly deviating definitions. Breeds are formed through genetic isolation and either natural adaptation to the environment or selective breeding, or a combination of the two. Despite the centrality of the idea of "breeds" to animal husbandry and agriculture, no single, scientifically accepted definition of the term exists.: 340  A breed is therefore not an objective or biologically verifiable classification but is instead a term of art amongst groups of breeders who share a consensus around what qualities make some members of a given species members of a nameable subset.

Another point of view is that a breed is consistent enough in type to be logically grouped together and when mated within the group produce the same type. When bred together, individuals of the same breed pass on these predictable traits to their offspring, and this ability – known as "breeding true" – is a requirement for a breed. Plant breeds are more commonly known as cultivars. The offspring produced as a result of breeding animals of one breed with other animals of another breed are known as crossbreeds or mixed breeds. Crosses between animal or plant variants above the level of breed/cultivar (i.e. between species, subspecies, botanical variety, even different genera) are referred to as hybrids.

Examples of use of breed
1. "If you ban one breed, they will get a different breed," said Tsygelnitsky.
2. The good news is the emergence, not of a new breed of politician, but a new breed of business leaders.
3. But no breed is intrinsically aggressive." No one collates statistics on dog bites by breed, so we lack the evidence to prove that one breed is more likely to cause injury than another.
4. Please don‘t blame the breed of dog for this crime, people like Myers would make any breed they owned aggressive. – D.J.K, Manchester, England Disgusting.
5. While Havana browns are considered a separate breed in the United States, European cat breed associations consider them a color variation of Siamese.