nounπShareA small horse; specifically, any of several small breeds of horse under 14.2 hands at the withers."My little sister loves to ride her pony at the stables. "animaltypenatureChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShareA small serving of an alcoholic beverage, especially beer."1879, βSome Queer Interviews: Interview with a Pony of Beerβ, Puck, Vol. 5β6, p. 435"drinkfoodChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShare(New South Wales, Victoria) A serving of 140 millilitres of beer (formerly 5 fl oz); a quarter pint."At the pub, I ordered a pony of pale ale. "drinkamountChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShareTwenty-five pounds sterling.""The old bicycle cost me a pony, which was a bit more than I wanted to spend." "financeeconomyamountChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShareA translation used as a study aid; loosely, a crib, a cheat-sheet."During the exam, the student nervously glanced at the pony hidden under their desk for help with the difficult vocabulary words. "educationaidwritingwordlanguageChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShareA ponytail hairstyle."My daughter wore a neat pony for her school presentation. "appearancestyleChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo lead (a horse) from another horse."The ranch hand had to pony the injured mare back to the barn, using his own steady horse as a guide. "animalvehiclesportChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo use a crib or cheat-sheet in translating."To prepare for the French exam, Sarah had to pony up her notes. "educationlanguagecommunicationChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShareCrap; rubbish, nonsense."His explanation of the problem was just pony; it didn't make any sense at all. "languagewordChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
adjectiveπShareOf little worth."The old, worn-out textbook was a pony gift for the student, of little practical value. "valuebusinessChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading