How to Use foot-and-mouth disease in a Sentence
foot-and-mouth disease
noun-
Stem rust, rice blast, foot-and-mouth disease, avian flu, hog cholera.
—Nicola Twille, Wired, 6 July 2021
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Uh oh, foot-and-mouth disease might run through Rip’s herd.
—William Earl, Variety, 22 May 2026
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The statement went on to warn that foot-and-mouth disease is a concern with Argentine beef.
—Matthew Adams, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 24 Oct. 2025
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Now, in just episode four, their new operation has already lost its inventory to foot-and-mouth disease.
—Noel Murray, Vulture, 29 May 2026
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Popular hypotheses held that bats spread Ebola virus, for example, and gazelles foot-and-mouth disease.
—New York Times, 12 Jan. 2021
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Animals with foot-and-mouth disease typically exhibit symptoms such as fever and blisters, or sores in the mouth, teats and between the hooves.
—Monica Cull, Discover Magazine, 28 July 2022
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After their herd was wiped out from a foot-and-mouth disease outbreak, they're left with no choice but to ally themselves with their rival ranch, 10-Petal.
—Julia Moore, PEOPLE, 5 June 2026
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Its animal vaccines have been used to protect billions of farm animals from foot-and-mouth disease and to chemically castrate pigs.
—Scott Deveau, Bloomberg.com, 5 May 2020
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For many, the very idea evokes memories of the catastrophic 2001 foot-and-mouth disease crisis, which led to the culling of millions of sheep.
—Washington Post, 17 Aug. 2019
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Producers fear that the export market would vanish overnight if diseases, including mad cow or foot-and-mouth disease, infected Australian cattle.
—Nick Lichtenberg, Fortune, 25 July 2025
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In her longest-in-British-history reign, nothing has kept the queen away from the five days of races — not pregnancy, a speech to Parliament or even an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease.
—Pan Pylas, USA TODAY, 17 June 2020
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Over the decades the O’odham placed some barbed wire along the border to keep livestock from straying into the neighboring country, limiting the spread of maladies such as foot-and-mouth disease and hindering cattle thieves.
—Geraldo L. Cadava, The Atlantic, 20 June 2026
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The Imperial College modeling team should have faced an audit of its models and practices after the foot-and-mouth disease debacle more than 20 years ago.
—Steve H. Hanke, National Review, 30 Mar. 2022
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Hungary detected its first foot-and-mouth disease outbreak in over 50 years on March 7, 2025, at a cattle farm near the Slovak border.
—Holly Ellyatt, CNBC, 26 Oct. 2025
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The bonanza ended when the US permanently halted hedgehog shipments from countries with foot-and-mouth disease, a list that included Nigeria.
—Noelle Mateer, Wired, 12 Aug. 2021
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The facility modified its priorities, focusing on foot-and-mouth disease and disbanding the ASF team.
—Laura Reiley, Washington Post, 27 Nov. 2019
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In 2001, when foot-and-mouth disease swept across Britain, causing millions of farm animals to be slaughtered, the Chinese food industry was widely, and wrongly, blamed.
—Christina Boyle, Los Angeles Times, 10 Sep. 2021
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In 1898, the same year as Beijerinck’s work was published, foot-and-mouth disease in cattle became the first animal illness linked to a filterable agent, or a microbe small enough to pass through a porcelain filter.
—Theresa MacHemer, Smithsonian Magazine, 24 Mar. 2020
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The idea of animal analytics was hugely important within the agricultural industry at the time, because of recent outbreaks of foot-and-mouth disease, highlighting the risks of not keeping records of animal movements.
—Chris Stokel-Walker, Fortune, 26 June 2025
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In episode 4 of Dutton Ranch, Beth (Kelly Reilly) and Rip (Cole Hauser) kill their entire herd after a foot-and-mouth disease outbreak.
—Julia Moore, PEOPLE, 29 May 2026
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But Dutton Ranch took it to another level in its fourth episode, when foot-and-mouth disease infected Rip (Cole Hauser) and Beth's (Kelly Reilly) entire herd, forcing them to kill ALL their cattle.
—Samantha Highfill, Entertainment Weekly, 1 June 2026
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Incredibly, the event has only been scuttled twice in 120 years — first in 1915, when foot-and-mouth disease raged in the livestock community, and then again in 2021, due to COVID-19 restrictions.
—John Wenzel, Denver Post, 7 Jan. 2026
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Now serving as 10 Petal's strategist, Beth accompanies Beulah to Dallas to secure a licensing deal with Frontier Hospitality Group — an opportunity Beth had originally envisioned for Dutton Ranch before foot-and-mouth disease wiped out their herd.
—Samantha Stutsman, PEOPLE, 13 June 2026
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'foot-and-mouth disease.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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