gypsy life - translation to dutch
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gypsy life - translation to dutch

HORSE BREED
Vanner Gypsy horse; Gypsy vanner horse; Gypsy Vanner Horse; Gypsy vanner; Gypsy cob; Gypsy Vanner horse; Gypsy Vanner; Drumhorse; Irish Cob; Gypsy Cob; Gypsy Horse; Tinker horse
  • Caravans at Appleby Horse Fair
  • Feather on the lower legs
  • Hocks of a foal
  • Historic image of a traveller family, vardo, and horse
  • Mare and foal near [[Builth Wells]], [[Powys]], Wales
  • Horse-trading in The Sands in [[Appleby-in-Westmorland]]
  • A solid-coloured cob
  • In harness

gypsy life         
1945 FILM BY CONNIE RASINSKI
Gypsy Life
zigeunerleven (zwerversbestaan)
life insurance         
  • Life insurance premiums written in 2005
FINANCIAL PRODUCT
Life assurance; Permanent life insurance; Life Insurance; Life-insurance; Life insurer; Life Assurance; Life insuranc; Cheap Life Insurance; Traded life policy; Life insurance policy; Insurance on lives; Wholesale life insurance; Wholesale life; Final expense
levensverzekering
daily life         
  • Watching television
  • Children reading books
  • Grooming
  • ''[[The Psychopathology of Everyday Life]]''
ROUTINE PROCESSES IN PEOPLE'S DAILY AND WEEKLY CYCLE
Day in a life; Daily life; Sociology of everyday life; Sociologies of everyday life; Everydayness; Dailiness; Mere life
dagelijks leven

Definition

Dailiness
·noun Daily occurence.

Wikipedia

Gypsy horse

The Gypsy Cob, also known as the Traditional Gypsy Cob, Irish Cob, Gypsy Horse, Gypsy Vanner, or Tinker Horse is a type or breed of domestic horse from the islands Great Britain and Ireland. It is a small, solidly-built horse of cob conformation and is often, but not always, piebald or skewbald; it is particularly associated with Irish Travellers and English Romanichal Travellers of Ireland and Great Britain. There was no stud-book or breed registry for horses of this type until 1996,: 58  but as breeders developed standards and recorded pedigrees, there are now organizations that register qualifying horses.: 58 .

From about 1850, travelling people in the British Isles began to use a distinct type of horse to pull their vardos, the caravans in which they had just begun to live and travel. The color and look of the breed were refined in the years after the Second World War. Horses of this type were first exported to the United States in 1996.