HARVESTS vs CROP: NOUN
- Plural form of harvest.
- The yield from plants in a single growing season
- The consequence of an effort or activity
- The gathering of a ripened crop
- The season for gathering crops
- A similar enlargement in the digestive tract of annelids and insects.
- A pouchlike enlargement of a bird's gullet in which food is partially digested or stored for regurgitation to nestlings.
- The stock of a whip.
- A short whip used in horseback riding, with a loop serving as a lash.
- A short haircut.
- A group, quantity, or supply appearing at one time.
- The total yield of such produce in a particular season or place.
- A kind of whip used by horsemen in the hunting-field, consisting of a short, stout, and straight staff having a crooked handle, and a loop of leather at the end.
- A pouch in many birds and some lower animals that resembles a stomach for storage and preliminary maceration of food
- The yield from plants in a single growing season
- A collection of people or things appearing together
- The output of something in a season
- The stock or handle of a whip
- Cultivated plants or agricultural produce, such as grain, vegetables, or fruit, considered as a group.
- The top or highest part of anything, especially of an herb or a tree.
- Corn and other cultivated plants grown and garnered; the produce of the ground; harvest: as, the crops are 10 per cent. larger than last year; in a more restricted sense, that which is cut, gathered, or garnered from a single field, or of a particular kind of grain or fruit, or in a single season: as, the wheat-crop; the potato-crop.
- Corn and other cultivated plants while growing: as, a standing crop; the crop in the ground; the crops are all backward this year.
- The first stomach of a fowl; the craw; the ingluvies: sometimes used humorously of the human maw or stomach.
- In insects, an anterior dilatation of the alimentary canal, succeeded by the proventriculus. See cut under Blattidæ.
- In the United States, usually a crop of which the herbage is eaten either green or dry, not exclusive of pasturage; the meaning is not well defined with reference to roots, which (until recently the sugar-beet) have been little grown in the United States. (See the extract.) T. Shaw (“Forage Crops,” p. 1) restricts the term to pasture crops other than grasses.
- In certain cephalopods and other mollusks, a more or less dilated portion of the esophagus, sometimes forming a lobular cæcum.
- The working unit in the making of turpentine, consisting of a forest tract of from 200 to 250 acres, containing approximately 10,500 faces.
- In cattle, a portion of the back, on either side of the median line, immediately back of the shoulder. See cut under point
- An earmark on an animal.
- In tanning, an entire untrimmed hide, struck for sole-leather. Also called crop-hide.
- In mining, the outcrop of a lode. See outcrop.
- A wig of rough, short hair.
- A fixed weight in different localities for sugar, tobacco, and other staples. A crop hogshead of tobacco is from 1,000 to 1,300 pounds net.
- An ear-mark.
- The act of cutting or clipping off, as hair: as, he has given you a pretty close crop.
- Anything gathered when ready or in season: as, the ice-crop.
- The hair of the head when thick and short, forming a sort of cap.
HARVESTS vs CROP: VERB
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harvest.
- Gather, as of natural products
- Remove from a culture or a living or dead body, as for the purposes of transplantation
- Cut short
- Feed as in a meadow or pasture
- Let feed in a field or pasture or meadow
- Yield crops
- Prepare for crops
- Cultivate, tend, and cut back the growth of
HARVESTS vs CROP: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To cut or bite off the tops or ends of.
- To cut (hair, for example) very short.
- To clip (an animal's ears, for example).
- To harvest.
- To cause to grow or yield a crop.
- To feed on growing grasses and herbage.
- To plant, grow, or yield a crop.
- To trim (a photograph or picture, for example).
HARVESTS vs CROP: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- A cultivated plant that is grown commercially on a large scale
- To shear; cut the nap from, as woolen cloth.
- To cut down needlessly the outer margins of a book. When this cutting shaves the type the book so treated is said to be bled.
- To take off the top or head of (a plant); cut off the ends of; eat off; pull off; pluck; mow; reap: as, to crop flowers, trees, or grass; to crop fruit from the tree.
- To cut off a part of (the ear of an animal) as a mark of identification, or for other reasons.
- To cause to bear a crop; plant or fill with crops; raise crops on: as, to crop a field.
- To sprout; appear in part, and apparently by accident or undesignedly, from beneath the surface or otherwise from concealment; become partly visible or obvious: with out, sometimes up or forth.
- To appear incidentally and undesignedly; come to light or to the surface: as, his peculiarities crop out in his work; the truth cropped out in spite of him.
- To yield harvest.
HARVESTS vs CROP: RELATED WORDS
- Removals, Landings, Reaps, Collections, Catches, Cropping, Hunts, Fisheries, Yields, Crops, Harvest home, Harvest time, Glean, Reap, Crop
- Cut back, Craw, Work, Browse, Range, Trim, Dress, Clip, Snip, Lop, Graze, Cultivate, Prune, Pasture, Harvest
HARVESTS vs CROP: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Farmers, Corn, Plantings, Hectarage, Rains, Beechnuts, Operates, Cuts, Catch, Failures, Collections, Cropping, Fisheries, Crops, Crop
- Cut short, Cut back, Work, Browse, Range, Trim, Dress, Clip, Snip, Lop, Graze, Cultivate, Prune, Pasture, Harvest
HARVESTS vs CROP: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Harvests in that will address to lead the.
- Harvests have no choice but to be good.
- The same goes for asparagus and potato harvests.
- For a man harvests exactly what he plants.
- Purchasing of harvests and stubble production was applied.
- No wonder the whitened harvests are so bleached.
- Federal Government assumed management of some subsistence harvests.
- This prolific tree produces two harvests each year.
- Egg harvests not only provided a healthy spring food source, but also served as a mechanism for families to bond through intergenerational food harvests.
- DEA identifies the critical habitat units where timber harvests are likely and, within each unit, the number of acres suitable for timber harvests.
- Since acreage reporting dates vary by crop and county, consult your crop insurance agent or for more information see www.
- Wheat serves as an excellent rotation crop with vegetables, remaining the second largest acreage crop in Yuma County.
- Crop prices have been volatile, largely due to speculation over crop yields.
- Weeds destroys crop products but Bumper Crop Soil eliminates these unwanted plants.
- At times, having identical crop varieties growing will result in crop failure.
- Plant a cover crop after every cash crop in the rotation.
- See more ideas about Mens crop top, Crop tops, Half shirts.
- Snow, crop head of their Crop News and Estimate Division.
- Next, crop your photo using the online crop tool.
- Gross crop revenue is also shown, which includes gross crop value plus USDA commodity program payments and crop insurance indemnity payments.
HARVESTS vs CROP: QUESTIONS
- What is the shape of the altar of praying for good harvests?
- What are the two harvests in the Book of Revelation?
- What does Bilbo think of the harvests in the Shire?
- Will 2018-19 be the year olive harvests are hit in Europe?
- How can harvest logistics help forest owners run multiple harvests?
- When are deer harvests reported through the county?
- What is DNR doing about backlogged timber harvests?
- Can You crop a layer in Photoshop without the crop tool?
- Why crop insurance is important for agri-crop sector in India?
- What are the crop families and some notes on crop rotation?
- What crop budgets are included in the 2022 Nebraska crop report?
- Which crop is covered under crop insurance scheme rpmfby Dharmapuri?
- What does crop insurance cover for crop protection?
- What is crop protection and Crop utilization division?
- Does crop rotation increase or decrease crop output?
- Does Facebook have a crop tool for crop production?
- How do the first crop/second crop rules apply under the federal crop insurance?