bullock

[boo l-uh k] /ˈbʊl ək/
noun
1.
a castrated bull; steer.
2.
a young bull.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English bullok, Old English bulluc. See bull1, -ock
Examples from the web for bullock
  • bullock commented, well, you have done better than the rest of us.
British Dictionary definitions for bullock

bullock

/ˈbʊlək/
noun
1.
a gelded bull; steer
2.
(archaic) a bull calf
verb
3.
(intransitive) (Austral & NZ, informal) to work hard and long
Word Origin
Old English bulluc; see bull1, -ock
Word Origin and History for bullock
n.

Old English bulluc "young bull," from Proto-Germanic *bulluka-, from the stem of bull (n.1). Now always a castrated bull reared for beef.

bullock in the Bible

(1.) The translation of a word which is a generic name for horned cattle (Isa. 65:25). It is also rendered "cow" (Ezek. 4:15), "ox" (Gen. 12:16). (2.) The translation of a word always meaning an animal of the ox kind, without distinction of age or sex (Hos. 12:11). It is rendered "cow" (Num. 18:17) and "ox" (Lev. 17:3). (3.) Another word is rendered in the same way (Jer. 31:18). It is also translated "calf" (Lev. 9:3; Micah 6:6). It is the same word used of the "molten calf" (Ex. 32:4, 8) and "the golden calf" (1 Kings 12:28). (4.) In Judg. 6:25; Isa. 34:7, the Hebrew word is different. It is the customary word for bulls offered in sacrifice. In Hos. 14:2, the Authorized Version has "calves," the Revised Version "bullocks."