The developing grain head on all small grains is located just above the highest stem node of the plant. |
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The wood from a jarrah tree has a fine, variable grain with occasional natural features. |
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The grain was used for feeding the livestock and the straw for thatching the roof. |
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Throwing scratch grain around will get the hens scratching, which will fluff up the bedding and keep it well mixed. |
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Aquatic plant material and waste grain left in plowed fields make up the majority of the Canada Goose's diet. |
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Single malt whisky was considered too heavy by the Scots, so by blending malt and grain whiskies Walker created a smoother drink. |
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Movement toward grain fattening has been slow, because neither Argentine nor Uruguayan consumers have a taste for marbled beef. |
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Feedlot operators feed grain to ruminants because it makes the animals grow faster and fatter, resulting in highly marbled meat. |
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From the thinning mist, Sibyl watched as the serfs outside the outer bailey plowed the acres of harvest-ready grain and whatnot. |
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Rebecca scooped a small palm sized amount of grain and let him eat some from her hand. |
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This method of sawing accentuates the vertical grain and minimizes the flake, common in quarter-sawn oak. |
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Now with flawless tight grain kip skin leather and the best Pro Patterns, these gloves are sure to be the new industry benchmark. |
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Black levels are rich, colors are muted but hold their own against grain levels, and edges are sharp without degrading into jaggedness. |
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Wroughton farmers are to turn two old grain stores into a modern warehouse for storage and distribution. |
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Most grain elevators have thin wire cables to check the temperature of the grain inside. |
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Amaranth is a grain which grows abundantly in India, and in many other countries. |
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A demand is embedded in the very grain of the voice qua voice irrespective of the meaning it carries. |
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In the long troughs off to one side, he scooped a grain mix from the two barrels in the wagon. |
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Kurdish specialties include a type of wafer bread eaten for breakfast, and any kind of grain cooked in whey. |
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But you can gain more from grains by selecting whole wheat or whole grain pasta, bagels and bread. |
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Agriculture changed forever as grain production quadrupled within a decade and rose tenfold later. |
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In the same village, 70-year-old Samba Tutu winters her grain in the middle of the main road. |
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Beams of ash and oak were split along the grain by wedges, and they rolled great manna ashes down from the mountains. |
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The rustle of grain was gone, replaced by the earthy scent of a freshly harvested field. |
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An exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art took the word primitive with a grain of salt, as indicated by the scare quotes around it in the title. |
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Known as malting, this procedure releases the enzyme diastase, which converts the starches in grain to maltose sugar. |
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The blend includes Port Dundas grain whisky and malts from Caol Ila and Talisker. |
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Furthermore, early harvesting of grain can reduce the effects of diseases like scab, which increase with delayed harvest. |
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The Portugese came for the malaguetta pepper, the English for the grain and the Dutch to buy gold. |
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We need to sift the grain from the chaff and check out whether the allegations of abuse are genuine, exaggerated or altogether mala fide. |
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Moreover, in the Finnish countryside, alternatives to grain growing were scarce. |
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Economizing on propane at harvest is no saving when grain spoilage results in quality loss in storage. |
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Soft red winter wheat and corn used were produced on farms in southeast Virginia and obtained from a local grain dealer. |
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What with the high prices for the grain an' the exportin' wholesale since the war started, we'll be made up if it lasts. |
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Often, the powdery azurite encloses a small grain of cuprite, forming a blue halo that disperses into the siltstone. |
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After all the grain have been removed from the mahangu heads this grain must be winnowed to remove the husks. |
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It's no wonder that the first time we see Gideon he is hiding his family's grain in the secret compartment of a wine press. |
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But as long as America coddles its grain farmers, other nations won't drop import tariffs on U.S. meat. |
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They climbed trees to tap palm wine or fermented grain beers from harvest surpluses. |
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Once it begins to wear out it is no longer sanding, but polishing, which will close the grain again. |
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A cooling zone is established and moved through the grain in the same direction as the airflow. |
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The macrostructures disclosed the presence of equiaxed grains as well as areas of mixed grain structure. |
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As outputs increased following the take-up of the new seeds, grain prices fell, and more and more smaller farmers were forced out of business. |
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I'm on the other side of the fence, and I've been critical of some of you lately, so I'll understand if you take my advice with a grain of salt. |
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Kibbled bread contains kibbled grain which is grain that has been broken into smaller pieces. |
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Many personnel believe that no matter what they have to say, it will be taken with a grain of salt. |
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That is the thing about overall stats like this, you have to take them with a grain of salt. |
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Aluminum is widely used as a deoxidizer and was the first element used to control austenite grain growth during reheating. |
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Nail a 1 x 6 facia board to seal and trim the end grain of the rafter tails. |
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This is the grain most often used in tabbouleh and kibbeh, two popular Middle Eastern dishes. |
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Part I covers agronomic crops including grain crops, nut, bean, and oil crops, cotton, and sugar beet. |
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Brester's research program centers on livestock and grain issues, international trade, and agribusiness and farm management. |
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The product is whole grain if the first ingredient is whole grain, whole wheat or rye. |
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The slower the film speed, the finer the grain and the intensity of the colours will be better. |
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Energy from the grain apparently helps complete the conversion of nitrate to bacterial protein in the rumen. |
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The decision may be whether to let the grain dry in the field or to harvest higher-moisture corn and artificially dry the grain. |
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There was grain present, and some artifacts and pixelation, but it wasn't overly distracting. |
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They also agitated for free speech and assembly, the liberation of political prisoners and for the abolition of grain requisitioning. |
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No rolled loin of lamb with grain mustard, crisp pancetta and girolle mushrooms for me, then. |
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Sandwiches or rolls are often easiest and good choices if you use whole grain or wholemeal bread. |
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The bread contains nibbly, whole pieces of grain which have the reputation of damaging fillings. |
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This field will need to be rotated to grain sorghum and replanted using safened seed when soil moisture conditions permit field operations. |
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This high temperature treatment produces uniform austenite of rather large grain size. |
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Yield and grain quality losses are greater when soybeans are not rotated with other crops. |
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Many rococo revival etageres were made from imported rosewood because the beautiful grain patterns followed the lines of carved decoration. |
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Meurig Raymond, whose enterprises include arable and beef production, warned that world grain output had not kept pace with consumption. |
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This includes seal engraving, die-sinking, line engraving, carving and also grain setting of precious stones in jewellery. |
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Wheat in Nebraska usually ripens under warm, dry conditions that favor development of quality grain for bread making. |
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Whole grain yeast breads rise more slowly and, in general, do not achieve the lightness of white flour yeast breads. |
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Time after time, he's undertaken initiatives which have gone against the grain of public opinion. |
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The foundation problems were solved, the grain elevator was righted, and it is still in use. |
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It is a feed variety with good resistance to rhynchosporium and virus resistance, grain of low specific weight. |
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In spring when the air temperature outside the bin is higher than the grain temperature, a reverse convection current will occur. |
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Plane with the grain of the wood whenever possible, to avoid catching and lifting chips of wood. |
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That crazy non-conformist is totally going against the grain by wearing an outfit designed by Wayne Cooper. |
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I've decided to go against the grain and not have any mixed drinks tonight. |
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Accompanied by whole grain bread, a soup rich with ingredients such as vegetables, beans, lentils and rice makes a simple wholesome meal. |
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But helping the poor directly would go against the grain of the ruling party's old guard. |
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Seed coat cells in the developing seeds of grain legumes release nutrients to the developing embryo. |
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However, the country is not self-sufficient in producing grain as a result of the limited arable land. |
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Not taking as final the manager's opinion on player purchases goes against the grain in the British game. |
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We take our water and mix it with malted barley or grain to make a drink called whisky. |
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He notes that wild cats may have been drawn to settlements where grain stores attracted rats and mice. |
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Engineers say the front-engine layout went against the grain of the ultimate aerodynamic shape, the teardrop design. |
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Layering is defined by halite of different colours and grain size with various concentrations of different impurities. |
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Initial porosity in well-sorted sand also is dependent on grain angularity, the porosity increasing with increase in angularity. |
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Apply the wax in the direction of the wood grain wherever possible and rub it in gently until the color blends with the floor. |
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The fourth lot is 42 acres which is zoned open space and is currently planted with grain crops. |
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Internal textures typically show pronounced zonation of crystallite orientation and grain size. |
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Despite this, the trials of other feed grain wheats and forage cereal varieties east of Bairnsdale continue to attract the interest of growers. |
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The farmers wanted inputs such as fertiliser, chemicals, stockfeeds, grain bags, and other inputs to be zero-rated. |
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Bulgaria's State Agriculture Fund has started selecting grain producers for buying out bread wheat for the newly set up Grain Commodity Fund. |
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It is well known that red-grained wheats show a wider variation in grain dormancy than white-grained wheats. |
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Piling grain outdoors shouldn't be considered a last resort, provided you prepare a proper site and invest in grain covers. |
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By the 1920s a state-subsidized system of grain elevators, silos, and storage at railheads helped to ease the cycle of glut and scarcity. |
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After finishing the surface, the grain texture of amboyna wood has a depth and richness unmatched in other textured woods. |
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Oxen are yoked to the plough, donkeys carry the harvest from field to village, and cows and sheep trample the grain on the threshing floor. |
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If you're using corduroy remnants, cut the strips across the fabric grain with the cords running perpendicular to the strip length. |
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Instead, we are cultivating food crops like jowar, pulses, beans, etc., which should take care of our annual grain requirement. |
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It is important to appreciate that equations cannot be used to predict the lower yield stress unless the resultant grain size is known. |
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In these alloys, yield stress have been shown to have only a weak dependence on grain size. |
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The grain amaranth has nine times more calcium than wheat, and 40 times more calcium than rice. |
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Why was nothing was done to fumigate the grain and protect it from weevils? |
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Our sense of national pride has been turned into plain old jingoistic nationalism by people who just want to sell us fermented grain juice. |
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Mineral grains are typically fractured and show dark alteration along grain boundaries and fractures. |
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In some areas geese and yellowbills eat grain crops and can cause local damage. |
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Kvass is a lightly fermented sour-sweet beverage that is commonly made of black bread or grain with yeast and somewhat resembles beer in flavor. |
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August 1 is Lammas, which is a celebration of the first harvest, particularly of grain products. |
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Charts are available that show grain equilibrium moisture for different crops, temperatures and relative humidities. |
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But if the weather forecast is to be believed, there could be a grain of hope. |
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Our mentor in organic farming has a large small grain acreage, with some of the fields having small rocks. |
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Garnet has a general grain size of about 3 mm and its composition is almandine, pyrope, spessartine and grossular. |
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Her secret to keeping her energy up is quinoa, a grain from the Andes mountains in Peru which was one of the staple foods of the Incas. |
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Instead, focus on getting whole-grain baked goods, fresh produce and grain alternatives such as amaranth, quinoa and buckwheat. |
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Many vineyards are located on valley bottoms underlain by alluvium which can provide deep, free-draining soils of variable grain size. |
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On the Continent the removal of the grain mountains and wine lakes is taken as meaning the system is working. |
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Xenia describes any immediate effect a pollen grain has on the germ or endosperm of seed plants. |
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Thus, in many ways qualitative research cuts across the grain of accustomed research practice. |
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Vocal critics abound and many new dietary regimes suggest limiting grain products rather than encouraging them. |
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The grain purchase programs determined at the national level were difficult to implement locally. |
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Concerns about reliability and validity creep in, and I offer a word to the wise to take their results with a grain of salt. |
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These treatments often accentuate the natural or rustic look of rough sawn lumber and allow the wood grain and surface texture to show through the finish. |
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Lab tests showed that the birds ate grain tainted with insecticide. |
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Grain SA chairman Bully Botma said the recovery of the rand against the dollar over the past few days had led to a significant reduction in grain prices. |
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Most grain mold pathogens become associated with the kernel in the field but can grow within the colonized kernel and even spread to adjacent kernels during storage. |
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The immature grain of these hybrids is high in tannin and quite bitter. |
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Spanish oak, which has an open grain and high levels of tannin, gives you dried fruit, spice, and even chocolate flavors. |
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Weather conditions in Europe, with extreme wetness in the northern regions of the continent and a heat wave in the south, are impacting grain production. |
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Here at home, Western Australia's grain handling group CBH believes the state is on target for a winter crop of 12 million tonnes, down two million on last season. |
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In a sense, as a student to go against the grain was to be a Thatcherite. |
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He used form boards that were sandblasted to produce a wood grain impression on the wall and inserted powder-coated T-shaped steel rods to support the treads and handrail. |
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Only in Flanders and a few contiguous districts was grain rotated with soil-restoring fodder crops, such as clover, lucerne, and sainfoin, and fallow thus eliminated. |
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It supports the restoration of a levy on grain imports from the Black Sea and Baltic regions and pledges to resist any further support price cuts. |
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They also demanded the return of their recently socialized grain reserves, noting that the grain was simply rotting in its current storage conditions. |
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Right after all the parades for record-setting grain harvests and successful launches of canine cosmonauts. |
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No one was injured in a dramatic truck-train collision in La Broquerie late Friday afternoon in which a speeding train slammed into a loaded grain truck. |
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The lithographed posters are entirely hand printed, one color and one sheet at a time, on an old German litho press using 320 grain Coventry Rag Vellum paper. |
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For the moment I am taking this report with a grain of salt, since previous sightings of Iranian infiltrators have often been proven inaccurate later on. |
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Just feeding moldy grain isn't a wise idea, but moldy grain can be roasted, sprouted grain can be dried, and baleage can be made if you can't get hay dry. |
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The grain is secure in its barns, the linen folded away in its cupboards. |
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Decking should always be quarter sawed and laid with the edge grain up. |
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Circumstance shows us how anyone who goes against the fundamentalist grain is forced to lead a double life. |
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Much as it goes against the grain to praise the legal profession in any way, I was reminded earlier this week of one of the benefits of the profession. |
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Statues, old stone troughs, urns, grain store mushrooms, garden seats, limestone pavements and even complete fountains are all being targeted by organised gangs. |
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These apophyses extend 50 pm into the adjacent quartz grains and, when viewed parallel to the grain boundaries, form irregular branching features. |
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Corn production for grain or silage is possible in Eastern and Southeastern Ohio on land reclaimed to modern standards after being surface mined for coal. |
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The team looked at crops such as corn, peas, proso millet, safflower, sunflower, triticale, and winter wheat, with some crops grown for grain and some for forage. |
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Varieties of winter wheat used for grain may also be used for forage. |
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Sorghum juice can be extracted for fermentation and distillation without damaging the grain at the top of the stalk. |
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Today, a people that prided itself on rugged self-sufficiency during the war depend on the steady flow of trucks carrying sacks of grain donated by the World Food Programme. |
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As a matter of fact, over-indulgence in grain has been tied to azoturia, yet so have vitamin and mineral deficiencies, hormonal imbalances, and severe dehydration. |
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When did you last hear a politician genuinely appeal to our higher nature, go against the grain because what they believed in was simply the right thing to do? |
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Stalin, now one of the top men in the party, was sent there by Lenin to ensure that grain was getting shipped to Moscow. |
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Against the grain By Michael Specter, The New Yorker Should you go gluten-free? |
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Decent ryes take anywhere from five to 10 years to age, and there's a shortage of grain producers. |
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Clean, blip and fleck free pictures, well saturated colors, and a dash of light grain with a splash of digital edge enhancement make for a satisfactory overall presentation. |
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The treated grain is pitted and sealed in an airtight clamp. |
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Without grain in summer, the Holsteins and Jerseys got too skinny. |
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From the Andes to dinner tables in the U.S., quinoa has come a long, flavorful way to prominence in the grain family. |
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The next time someone says one bullet is vastly superior to another in regards to wind deflection, take their advice with a grain of salt and check for yourself. |
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It had been a disaster, diverting farmers from the land, draining their grain supplies and ultimately starving millions. |
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The pollen grain is the male gametophytic phase of flowering plants. |
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Generally by the time you leave one place, you'll already be able to see the water tower and grain elevator of the next hamlet rising above the fields in the distance. |
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If acetamide herbicides are used, grain sorghum seed must be pre-treated with a safener that protects it from injury caused by the acetamide herbicides. |
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For cleaning, I liberally spray Lysol or Clorox disinfectant onto the blade and anvil, and then vigorously work to remove all plant sap using 600 grain sandpaper for metal. |
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Redwood beauty is typified by rich cinnamon-colored heartwood, cream-colored sapwood, distinctive grain and performance that keeps projects looking good for years. |
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They pop up unexpectedly every few kilometres in the wheat belt, normally serviced by a railway siding, and harboring grain in readiness for shipment to Iraq, or wherever. |
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Most of them are unit trains of grain hoppers or container trains. |
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Cereal leaf beetle larvae may defoliate small grain foliage in the spring. |
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And now when they have been praying for dry weather so that they can harvest their kharif crop and take it to grain markets, heavy rains are wreaking havoc. |
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The ngosha is a small but very numerous granivorous bird that sweeps over the sky in flocks like small clouds and descends on grain fields to feast. |
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In 1987, he trademarked the name Kamut in order to market khorasan wheat, a high-protein, high-selenium, hypoallergenic grain purported to have its origins in ancient Egypt. |
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All that could be carried off was taken, all that could not was wasted by the fires they kindled, even onto the humblest grain store-house of the poor cottars. |
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Rye, barley, and sometimes wheat can figure into the grain mixture, but corn has to claim the majority. |
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Since densification of powders requires high temperatures, grain growth naturally occurs during sintering. |
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By analyzing the costs of operating a country grain elevator these advantages, if any exist, should appear. |
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In central hilum starch grains the grain is laid down around the hilum in the form of concentric layers. |
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Her story contains a grain of truth but also lots of exaggeration. |
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This toughness is the result of a uniquely fine grain size imparted by vanadium to steel, anodium steels are readily cast, forged, and rolled. |
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A grain of musk will scent a drawer for many years, and still lose nothing appreciable of its original weight. |
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The few chairs and the low table had been stripped of paint to reveal the brightsome grain of pine wood. |
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To separate out the chaff, early cultures tossed baskets of grain into the air and let the wind blow away the lighter chaff. |
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Do not swallow every story that is told. There may be a grain of truth somewhere in all the myths, but chew the meat and spit out the bones. |
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For this reason medium-grained granite is most adaptable, if it may be split and cobbed readily along rift and grain directions. |
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The farmer supplemented the grain with fishmeal to increase the protein content of the cattle's diet. |
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Fullholders' grain rents had remained unchanged since 1727, ranging from 3 to 12 bushels per farm. |
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Keep grain rations in a goatproof place. Covered garbage cans work well if the lids are secured with tie-downs. |
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The invisible cord... I followed him down a narrow path with a rippling lake of grain on each side, wheat stalks brushing my hosen. |
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Clodius also passed a law to expand the previous partial grain subsidy to a fully free grain dole for citizens. |
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Mandubracius, who had accompanied Caesar, was restored as their king, and the Trinovantes provided grain and hostages. |
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The port at Ostia was part of Claudius' solution to the constant grain shortages that occurred in winter, after the Roman shipping season. |
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The magister militum in the Diocese of Africa declared for the East and stopped the supply of grain to Rome. |
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Alaric's military operations centred on the port of Rome, through which Rome's grain supply had to pass. |
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Attalus failed to establish his control over the Diocese of Africa, and no grain arrived in Rome where the famine became even more frightful. |
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The Romans regained Numidia, and Rome again received a grain supply from Africa. |
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The higher wages for workers combined with sinking prices on grain products led to a problematic economic situation for the gentry. |
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When sewing strip sets, use a lighthanded approach feeding the strips under the presser foot so the crosswise grain isn't stretched. |
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Electric motors applied in agriculture eliminated human and animal muscle power from such tasks as handling grain or pumping water. |
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Then the grain would be put in the hopper on top and then follow along behind it while the seed drill spaced and planted the seed. |
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Birds can damage a roof while they are foraging for grubs, and rodents are attracted by residual grain in straw. |
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Irish whiskey is also popular throughout the country, and comes in various forms, including single malt, single grain and blended whiskey. |
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The tariffs on grain which kept the price of bread artificially high were repealed. |
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The choice of proppant depends on the type of permeability or grain strength needed. |
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While Rona used to support a small population who grew grain and raised cattle, Sula Sgeir is an inhospitable rock. |
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I prescribed Iodized Lime, 1-2 grain every half hour. The stomach soon began to nauseate. |
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Amsterdam grew and in the 15th century became the primary trading port in Europe for grain from the Baltic region. |
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Amsterdam distributed grain to the major cities of Belgium, Northern France and England. |
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This trade was vital, because Holland could no longer produce enough grain to feed itself. |
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Urban populations and the military preferred to consume their grain in the form of bread. |
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Large quantities of burnt grain were recovered indicating that the building was a grain store that had been destroyed by fire. |
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Thus, there are nine grains mentioned in the text, from a grain of wheat to a bean. |
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Whisky or whiskey is a type of distilled alcoholic beverage made from fermented grain mash. |
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Though traditionally distilled using pot stills, the column still is now used to produce grain whiskey for blends. |
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The mill owners built a private jetty and began receiving grain shipments from Geelong, and returning processed flour and bran. |
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The remains of Law Mill, its grain drying kiln and water wheel are a category C listed building. |
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The Aurelian Walls were carried up the hill apparently to include the water mills used to grind grain towards providing bread flour for the city. |
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Being practically insoluble in copper the lead forms solid globules in imperfections throughout the alloy, such as grain boundaries. |
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In the 1840s, Chicago became a major grain port, and in the 1850s and 1860s Chicago's pork and beef industry expanded. |
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Out of fear of what Cerridwen would do to him, Gwion fled and eventually transformed into a piece of grain before being consumed by Cerridwen. |
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Wheat, however, the grain used to bake bread back in England was almost impossible to grow, and imports of wheat were far from cost productive. |
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Sand that is transported long distances by water or wind will be rounded, with characteristic abrasion patterns on the grain surface. |
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For each grain size there is a specific velocity at which the grains start to move, called entrainment velocity. |
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Because of its extremely small grain size, oolitic sand has a lot of surface area, which promotes high bacterial growth. |
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Roman rule in Sardinia lasted 694 years, during which time the province was an important source of grain for the capital. |
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Oatmeal or mixed grain porridge may also be served, usually topped with butter. |
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Dutch traders shipped wine from France and Portugal to the Baltic lands and returned with grain for countries around the Mediterranean Sea. |
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The planks were radially hewn so that the grain is approximately at right angles to the surface of the plank. |
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The most important material characteristic is the sediment grain size, which must closely match the native material. |
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The farming communities faced food shortages that year by losing their grain and livestock. |
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It was also converted to a gritter using the grain chute, capable of blasting grit through the windows of nearby cars. |
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The numerous population of natives, he says, live in thatched cottages, store their grain in subterranean caches and bake bread from it. |
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The grain size of a rock is usually expressed with the Wentworth scale, though alternative scales are sometimes used. |
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The statistical distribution of grain sizes is different for different rock types and is described in a property called the sorting of the rock. |
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Graded bedding is a structure where beds with a smaller grain size occur on top of beds with larger grains. |
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Though fields are visited for grain and green food, it is often not plentiful enough as to be a viewed as pest. |
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Cherry wood is valued for its rich color and straight grain in manufacturing fine furniture, particularly desks, tables and chairs. |
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Some of the pottery evidences grain impressions, which some interpret as the use of food imported from the south. |
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Some have therefore guessed that fermentation of grain was used to produce beer. |
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These now exist alongside the city's older industries of the docks, grain milling and tobacco processing. |
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In early 70 Vespasian was still in Egypt, the source of Rome's grain supply, and had not yet left for Rome. |
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During this period, protests erupted in Alexandria over his new tax policies and grain shipments were held up. |
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Polishing chalk is chalk prepared with a carefully controlled grain size, for very fine polishing of metals. |
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Due to the large grain sizes of pumice and phenocrystals a relatively proximal source of tephra U4T is proposed. |
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Lautering is the separation of the extracts won during mashing from the spent grain to create wort. |
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Caesar noted that rather than grain crops, they spent time on husbandry and hunting. |
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Because a drought had disrupted his grain supply, Caesar was forced to winter his legions among the rebellious Belgic tribes. |
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Ukraine has long been a global breadbasket because of its extensive, fertile farmlands and is one of the world's largest grain exporters. |
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By soaking the batter overnight the grain is broken down, which results in a softer and more digestible pancake or pikelet. |
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Icelanders began to trade for grain from continental Europe, which was an expensive proposition. |
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The level of decomposition and dissolution could be modified by changing the plasmogenous gas or feed powder grain size. |
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The consistent rise in the price of grain during the 16th century encouraged the transfer of capital from trade to the land. |
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The mariners were reassigned to load grain on barges of the Grand Canal and to build the emperor's mausoleum. |
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The early Tang government established both the grain tax and cloth tax at a relatively low rate for each household under the empire. |
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He overruled his secretaries by ordering that grain should be sent immediately to relieve disaster areas. |
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Government officials expropriated grain and other produce from rural Cossack families, leaving them to starve and die. |
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They farmed grain and millet as their cereal crops, grew flax, and raised oxen, pigs, sheep and horses. |
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First they ordered the local population to withdraw, thereby ending the grain production that had attracted the Russians in the first place. |
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Sometimes, concentrated feed such as grain is fed in addition to pasture or hay, especially when the animal is very active. |
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For storing grain in bins, the moisture of the grain must be sufficiently low to avoid spoiling. |
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They are often kept on the cob for storage in a corn crib, or they may be shelled off for storage in a grain bin. |
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It is classified as both a grain legume and, because of its high oil content, an oil crop. |
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Today, the Bajio is still one of the major grain producing regions in Mexico. |
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Webster grew increasingly authoritarian and elitist, fighting against the prevailing grain of Jacksonian Democracy. |
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We realize what Archimedes had only in hypothesis, weighting a single grain against the globe of earth. |
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Between 1873 and 1879 British agriculture suffered from wet summers that damaged grain crops. |
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As farming developed, grain agriculture became more sophisticated and prompted a division of labour to store food between growing seasons. |
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The resulting grain structure is circumferential, which gives better mechanical properties. |
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The rotary winnowing fan greatly increased the efficiency of separating grain from husks and stalks. |
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Liquid phase sintering was successfully applied to improve grain growth of thin semiconductor layers from nanoparticle precursor films. |
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The microstructure and grain size of the ceramics may vary depending on the material and method used. |
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However, the grain size changes in other ceramic materials, like tetragonal zirconia and hexagonal alumina, were not statistically significant. |
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Sintering in practice is the control of both densification and grain growth. |
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Grain growth is the process of grain boundary motion and Ostwald ripening to increase the average grain size. |
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Abnormal grain growth is when a few grains grow much larger than the remaining majority. |
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Convex surfaces have a higher chemical potential than concave surfaces therefore grain boundaries will move toward their center of curvature. |
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The original concentration of solute around the grain boundary will be asymmetrical in most cases. |
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This decrease in net chemical potential will decrease the grain boundary velocity and therefore grain growth. |
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The Red Rectangle is only one example of an infrared object that is detectable in the infrared because of grain emission. |
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The concave is curved to match the curve of the cylinder, and serves to hold the grain as it is beaten. |
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The incompletely threshed grain is returned to the cylinder by means of a system of conveyors, where the process repeats. |
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Other threshing machines would discharge grain from a conveyor, for bagging by hand. |
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Combines are equipped with a grain tank, which accumulates grain for deposit in a truck or wagon. |
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The precise dimensions and shape of flails were determined by generations of farmers to suit the particular grain they were harvesting. |
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Its main role throughout its history was the transport of grain to the capital. |
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This allowed the southern area to provide grain to the northern province, particularly to troops stationed there. |
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Some animals are also fed concentrated feeds such as grain or vitamin supplements in addition to hay. |
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The series contains differing grain sizes and comprises grits, flags, shales and mudstones. |
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Siltstone is a sedimentary rock which has a grain size in the silt range, finer than sandstone and coarser than claystones. |
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Attempts to sell Danish grain in Norway failed because of its low quality compared to grain from the Baltic. |
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In rift sawn wood cuts, the end grain is oriented 30-60 degrees to the face of the board. |
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Rift-sawn boards have a straight grain pattern as opposed to the circular pattern of the plain-sawn boards. |
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Axes to fell trees and sickles for harvesting grain were the only tools people might bring with them. |
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There are many types of sealed systems, for example an audio speaker, a printing machine, a heating system, or a grain storage system. |
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Between 1691 and 1724 cultivators were subject to the Tricesimation, a tax of one-thirtieth of grain and wine produced. |
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Compared to whole grain bread, most commercial white breads contain little dietary fiber. |
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We accept that, abrasive paper grain average statistical peak angle perpendicular to the direction of movement the plane is constant. |
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The Triangle Aeration Duct is a high-strength product for aerating grain in a hopper bin or other storage structure. |
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All flour produced by the Altay grain processor is known for excellent baking qualities and nutritious value. |
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Use a carving knife to cut the meat against the grain into thin slices. |
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Survey of Aspergillus section Flavi and anatoxin B1 in brewer's grain used as pig feedstuff in Cordoba, Argentina. |
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