yokes Sentence Examples

  1. The oxen struggled to pull the heavy yoke that bound them.
  2. The ancient mariner bore the heavy yoke of remorse for his fateful actions.
  3. The farmer deftly placed the yoke on the newly acquired bull.
  4. The wooden yoke creaked and groaned under the weight it bore.
  5. In the tapestry, the winged horse Pegasus playfully broke its golden yoke.
  6. The yokes of slavery still weighed heavily upon the hearts of the oppressed.
  7. The magician's enchantments had joined the yokes of two unlikely creatures.
  8. The carpenter carved elaborate yokes from seasoned oak.
  9. The prisoner's hands were bound together by a heavy iron yoke.
  10. The chariot driver's thunderous voice commanded the horses to bear their wooden yokes.

yokes Meaning

yokes

a wooden bar or frame by which two work animals (as oxen) are joined at their heads or necks for pulling a plow or load, a frame fitted to a person's shoulders to carry a load in two equal portions, a fitted or shaped piece at the top of a skirt or at the shoulder of a garment, two animals yoked or worked together, a clamp or similar piece that embraces two parts to hold or unite them in position, a bar by which the end of the tongue of a wagon or carriage is suspended from the collars of the harness, to join as if by a yoke, tie, link, servitude, bondage, to put to work, an arched device formerly laid on the neck of a defeated person, to attach a draft animal to, to join in or with a yoke, a clamp or brace that holds or unites two parts, to put a yoke on, a fitted or shaped piece at the top of a skirt or at the shoulder of various garments, to attach (a work animal) to something, a crosspiece on the head of a boat's rudder, to become joined or linked, to attach (a draft animal) to something, a frame from which a bell is hung, slavery sense 2a, an airplane control operating the elevators and ailerons, an oppressive agency, marriage, two animals yoked together, a wooden bar or frame by which two draft animals (such as oxen) are joined at the heads or necks for working together, something that brings about a state of hardship, pain, or slavery

FAQs About the word yokes

a wooden bar or frame by which two work animals (as oxen) are joined at their heads or necks for pulling a plow or load, a frame fitted to a person's shoulders

slaveries, bondages, thralls, enslavements,servitudes, captivities, thraldoms, servilities, subjections, serfdoms

liberties, liberations,freedoms, sovereignties,emancipations, enfranchisements, manumissions,independences, sovranties, autonomies

The oxen struggled to pull the heavy yoke that bound them.

The ancient mariner bore the heavy yoke of remorse for his fateful actions.

The farmer deftly placed the yoke on the newly acquired bull.

The wooden yoke creaked and groaned under the weight it bore.