Definition
A condition in horses characterized by a swelling or tumor, typically on the jaw or face, often caused by infection or injury.
Etymology
Origin uncertain, possibly from Old English or Germanic roots. The word appears in veterinary literature with unclear etymology, but may be related to Old Germanic words for swelling or abscess.
Kelly Says
Medieval horse traders had to know about 'ambury' because it could render a horse's jaw useless and make it unable to eat properly—it's the kind of specific veterinary knowledge that shaped which animals were considered valuable!
Translations
ARالعربية
ambury
am-bu-ree
CACatalà
ambury
am-bu-ree
CSČeština
ambury
am-bu-ree
DEDeutsch
ambury
am-bu-ree
ELΕλληνικά
ambury
am-bu-ree
ESEspañol
ambury
am-bu-ree
FRFrançais
ambury
am-bu-ree
HIहिन्दी
ambury
am-bu-ree
HUMagyar
ambury
am-bu-ree
IDBahasa Indonesia
ambury
am-bu-ree
ITItaliano
ambury
am-bu-ree
MSBahasa Melayu
ambury
am-bu-ree
MYမြန်မာ
ambury
am-bu-ree
NLNederlands
ambury
am-bu-ree
PLPolski
ambury
am-bu-ree
PTPortuguês
ambury
am-bu-ree
RORomână
ambury
am-bu-ree
RUРусский
ambury
am-bu-ree
SVSvenska
ambury
am-bu-ree
SWKiswahili
ambury
am-bu-ree
TEతెలుగు
ambury
am-bu-ree
TRTürkçe
ambury
am-bu-ree
UKУкраїнська
ambury
am-bu-ree
VITiếng Việt
ambury
am-bu-ree