Wetlands are also the granaries of our State, as rice is the major crop cultivated here. |
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In the Roman period, below-ground silos are replaced by granaries, often with suspended floors supported on timber or stone posts. |
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He says the government is trying to secure loans to build granaries and depots to store food to help the people through difficult times. |
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They have prevented the government building granaries and food depots that could store grain from one year to the next. |
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Physical inspection of household granaries however revealed that they had a very good harvest in most cases. |
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She arranged for a sizeable loan from the temple based on her deposits there and then purchased a great store of corn from the temple granaries. |
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Constitutionally the election does not need to be held before June, when, if the harvest has been good, granaries will be full. |
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However, they should consider sprinkling the powder inside the granaries before the grain has been stored. |
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It was also the site of critical imperial rice granaries that supplied the capital. |
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At the heart of the grange were farm buildings, paddocks, gardens, granaries, industrial areas and workshops, and a chapel. |
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These ancient granaries were built by Berber villagers to store their grain, oil and even valuables. |
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Excavations have uncovered two barracks housing cavalry troops, a forehall, granaries, and the remains of a hospital. |
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For example, in the case of grain the crop was transported from the threshing floor to the granaries by boat. |
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The farmstead had storage pits, drying frames and granaries, and was surrounded by a stockade. |
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It is advisable that prior to harvesting, the granaries and other storehouses are carefully cleaned. |
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In his practical inventory of farm assets, Palladio simply lists gardens together with granaries, storerooms, fishponds and dovecotes. |
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But now the government says a drum has managed to fill our granaries, a dancer has managed to build schools. |
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Most of those who had a harvest are in debt, and they will be left with very little in their granaries. |
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All the livestock quarters and the granaries in the village were empty. |
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In this program, RELUFA provides the villages with a working capital to allow granaries to build up their cereal banks. |
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Some teachers had to live in granaries, bunkhouses or sheds and in some cases, even barns or tents. |
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Over the centuries new aqueducts and cisterns were built to ensure an ample water supply, and the imperial granaries stored plentiful amounts of grain. |
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This tiny insect causes major problems in granaries worldwide, reducing the grain's nutritional value and ability to germinate and exposing it to odor, mold, and heat damage. |
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The janjaweed had smashed and burned all the granaries, to starve the locals into submission. |
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And some of the grain that China stores in its government granaries may not be much help in staving off hunger anyway. |
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These granaries were used to store foodstuffs, in particular wheat, as a contingency for sieges and wars. |
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So even though I lived on a farm and the granaries were full of grain, I had to buy the grain from him. |
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At the beginning of the last dry season the granaries were already almost empty. |
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Residents share the food when prices are peaking, then top up the granaries from the next harvest. |
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The RELUFA community granaries program allows them to restore their dignity, and feel more independent. |
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The impressive Negrych Homestead, comprised of the family home, bunkhouse, barns, granaries and surrounding buildings, encompasses the most complete and well-preserved set of pioneerera Ukrainian farm structures in Canada. |
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In the past, farming was almost entirely a subsistence affair with little grown except for maize, and the granaries visible from the road show that this remains the staple food. |
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Cranberry and durum wheat producers, certified organic farmers and crop farmers unable to access their granaries due to wet or flooded roads have more time to repay cash advances under the Advance Payment Program. |
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For more than 20 years performers and spectators have gathered for 10 days in June in the dunes, forests, granaries, helmets and on the beaches of the island of Terschelling, off the Dutch North Sea coast. |
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The fertile northern region of Uganda was known for many years as one of the granaries of the country, consistently producing surpluses for local and international food markets. |
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In folk architecture is required to refer to the famous granaries, granaries raised on four small pillars to protect farm products from moisture and rodents. |
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This project includes the distribution of seeds and gardening tools, the construction of drying sheds and granaries, and the creation of seed banks. |
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Many granaries and storehouses, built in the 14th century, line the banks of the Vistula. |
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To provide against possible famines, granaries were ordered built throughout the empire. |
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During the restoration, ancient archaeological findings have been brought to light, such as hypogean granaries and wells, stone mangers and drinking troughs. |
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In the cliff area, slope declivity and the narrowness of surface available for construction are such that the base of many granaries is to be supported by pillars or stone walls. |
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The advanced architecture of the Harappans is shown by their dockyards, granaries, warehouses, brick platforms, and protective walls. |
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Eventually granaries were developed that allowed villages to store their seeds longer. |
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The Tang government oversaw canal lock efficiency and built granaries along the route in case a flood or other disaster impeded the path of shipment. |
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The buildings in these villages varied in form, but normally consisted of farmhouses surrounded by smaller buildings such as granaries and other storage rooms. |
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As early as 736, granaries were built at critical points along the route from Yangzhou to Chang'an, which eliminated shipment delays, spoilage, and pilfering. |
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Grain from Cheshire was stored in granaries on the banks of the canal at Newtown and Boughton and salt for preserving food arrived from Northwich. |
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