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Corral

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Possible Answers:

PEN.

Last seen on: Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Apr 19 2023

Random information on the term “Corral”:

A boô (also spelled boo or boe) pronunciation (help·info) is an old Saxon building where a farmer could spend the night with his cattle if he let them graze far outside the village. The buildings, which had separate areas for cattle and farmer to live, were made with cheap materials. Walls were made of straw or braided twigs covered in cow manure or loam; the roofs were also made of straw.

The word boô is a cognate of the German word ‘Bude’ which means ‘shack’. The circumflex on the second ‘o’ indicates that a letter is left out. In Danish, ‘bo’ means house. The word boô is Low German.

A (usually unmarried) cattle farmer who spent time in a boô was called a boô-heer and was employed by a so-called “broodheer” (literally: bread lord). Once every fourteen days, the boô-heer would return to the farm for food supplies and clean clothes. He could keep the earnings of his only milk cow and the eggs his chickens laid.

The villages of Schoonebeek and Nieuw-Schoonebeek in the border area with Germany in the Dutch province of Drenthe are the only places where these buildings can be found. Because of this, Nieuw-Schoonebeek was known as Boôëndorf on the German side of the border. The boôs that can be found there today are replicas, which were not built in the original boôs’ locations.

Corral on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “PEN”:

PEN International (known as International PEN until 2010) is a worldwide association of writers, founded in London in 1921 to promote friendship and intellectual co-operation among writers everywhere. The association has autonomous International PEN centers in over 100 countries.

Other goals included: to emphasise the role of literature in the development of mutual understanding and world culture; to fight for freedom of expression; and to act as a powerful voice on behalf of writers harassed, imprisoned and sometimes killed for their views.

The first PEN Club was founded at the Florence Restaurant in London on October 5, 1921, by Catherine Amy Dawson Scott, with John Galsworthy as its first president. Its first members included Joseph Conrad, Elizabeth Craig, George Bernard Shaw, and H. G. Wells.

PEN originally stood for “Poets, Essayists, Novelists”, but now stands for “Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists, Novelists” and includes writers of any form of literature, such as journalists and historians.

PEN on Wikipedia

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