crupper

Etymology
From, , , from , , from , , from the same root as. .

Noun

 * 1) A strap, looped under a horse's tail, used to stop a saddle from slipping.
 * 2) * 1882, Edmondo de Amicis, Morocco: Its People & Places, tr. C. Rollin-Tilton:
 * I sought among the mules one with a mild expression of generosity and gentleness in its eyes, and found it in a white mule with a crupper adorned with arabesques.
 * 1) The buttocks or rump, especially of a horse.
 * 2) A piece of armour covering the hindquarters/buttocks of a horse.
 * I sought among the mules one with a mild expression of generosity and gentleness in its eyes, and found it in a white mule with a crupper adorned with arabesques.
 * 1) The buttocks or rump, especially of a horse.
 * 2) A piece of armour covering the hindquarters/buttocks of a horse.
 * 1) A piece of armour covering the hindquarters/buttocks of a horse.

Translations

 * Albanian: kuskun
 * Arabic: ثَفَر, قُوش
 * Bulgarian: подопа́шник
 * Catalan:
 * Danish:
 * East Yugur: ghudurgha
 * Finnish: häntähihna, häntäremmi
 * French:
 * Galician: atafal,
 * German: Schweifriemen, Schwanzriemen
 * Hungarian: ,
 * Kazakh: құйысқан
 * Latin: postilēna
 * Macedonian: подопашник
 * Mongolian:
 * Old English: æfterrāp
 * Ottoman Turkish: قوسقون, پاردم
 * Polish: podogonie
 * Portuguese :
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: grupera,
 * Swedish: svansrem
 * Tagalog: sabuntot, batikola
 * Turkish:, at sağrısı
 * Ukrainian: підхві́стя

Verb

 * 1) To fit with a crupper; to place a crupper upon.
 * to crupper a horse