View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Mouser.
Mouser meaning
A cat that catches mice, kept specifically for the purpose. | A moustache.
Synonyms of Mouser
Example sentences (20)
In the video, Tom's owner calls him and introduces him to the robotic cat that would perform the tasks he was unable to do in his work as a mouser.
Larry the Cat to the rescue — Downing Street’s “chief mouser” made headlines this week when he chased off a fox twice his size.
Mouser was given credit for time served in the case.
We were asked to be purposeful on the way in, so I had to resist the temptation to pat Larry, the Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office.
FARGO -- Cale Mouser from Tenstrike recently received the North Dakota State University Provost Award in the amount of $6,000.
How has that helped shape your performance and work with Mary Mouser, Xolo Maridueña and Tanner Buchanan?
Time spent in lockdown was just superb for Palmerston, the chief mouser at the U.K. Foreign Office.
Recently, I read an article by Jessica Mouser in ChurchLeaders.com about Chick-fil-A (CFA) and the commitment and faithfulness of the founder of the company and his family.
Sherwood, who was relatively new to the greenhouse when Basil arrived, played a critical role in helping Basil get adjusted, but admits it’s “taken a village” to support the chief mouser.
Along with the Gray Mouser's patron warlock Sheelba, Ningauble often sends his hapless minion on ludicrous missions such as recovering the mask of Death or to steal the very stars from the highest mountain.
Contains a wealth of critical essays on Leiber's work, together with three poems by Leiber: "Challenge", "Ghosts" and "The Grey Mouser".
Fafhrd talks like a romantic, but his strong practicality usually wins through, while the cynical-sounding Mouser is prone to showing strains of sentiment at unexpected times.
Fischer also wrote "The Childhood and Youth of the Gray Mouser", published in 1978.
In 1936, Leiber finished the first Fafhrd and Gray Mouser novella, Adept's Gambit, and began work on a second, The Tale of the Grain Ships.
Joanna Russ ' stories about thief-assassin Alyx (collected in 1976 in The Adventures of Alyx ) were in part inspired by Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser, and Alyx in fact made guest appearances in two of Leiber's stories.
Leiber himself is credited with inventing the term sword and sorcery for the particular subgenre of epic fantasy exemplified by his Fafhrd and Grey Mouser stories.
Leiber then included Alyx in two Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser stories, "The Two Best Thieves in Lankhmar" (1968) and "Under the Thumbs of the Gods" (1975).
Ningauble and Sheelba Ningauble of the Seven Eyes and Sheelba of the Eyeless Face are two wizards who serve as patrons for Fafhrd and the Mouser.
Ningauble's mysterious cavern has obscure space-time linkages which permit Fafhrd and the Mouser to be sent to other worlds.
One player controlled Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser, who were trying to find a magical sword beneath an altar (just which one, they were not sure) in Lankhmar.