In a distant tree beyond the rickyard there was something hanging in the branches that I could not quite make out: it was a limb of a dead horse.
The path to Lucketts' Place from this rickyard passed a stone-quarry, where the excavated stone was built up in square heaps.
There was still an old punt, seldom used, to be found in a rickyard of Hilary's, close by which was an extensive pond.
The rooks were fond of maize, boldly descending among the poultry kept in a rickyard within a short distance of their trees.
In July such a rickyard is very hot; heat radiates from every straw.
He was down, and Orion's spaniel (that came racing like mad from the rickyard the instant he heard the discharge) had him in a moment.
And Orion was waiting in the rickyard for the sound of the report, and very likely the shepherd too.
There he goes out of sight a minute or two; but presently appears skirting the low shed and rickyard yonder, and is finally lost behind the hedges.
You must take us to farmer Pemberton's rickyard and stables.
Chaffinches, it must not be forgotten, frequent the rickyardin numbers.
But if any of the old folk live, they will not sell the ancient vessel: it stands behind the rickyard under the elms till the rain rots the upper work, and it is then broken up, and the axletree becomes the top bar of a stile.
It is distinct from the waggon-tracks which cross it here and there, for these are local only, and if traced up land the wayfarer presently in a maze of fields, or end abruptly in the rickyard of a lone farmhouse.
The flycatcher is a regular summer visitor: in the orchard, garden, and adjacent rickyard at least three pairs build every year.
There is a great rickyard not far distant, where in one of the open sheds is the thatcher's workshop.
Another waggon had shot its load, and was jolting out through the rickyard gate, as we swung ourselves in, shouting, over its tail.
The barn here with its broad red roof, and therickyard with the stone staddles, and the litter of chaff and straw, is the central rendezvous all the year of the resident labourers.
Between the gatepost and the wall that encloses the rickyard more straws are jammed, and yet more are borne up by the nettles beneath it.
The wheat, and barley, and hay carted home to the rickyard contain the seeds of innumerable plants, many of which, dropping to the ground, come up next year.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rickyard" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.