-
Ridge and
furrow is an
archaeological pattern of
ridges (Medieval Latin: sliones) and
troughs created by
a system of
ploughing used in
Europe during the...
- decay.
Trenches cut by the
plough are
called furrows. In
modern use,
a ploughed field is
normally left
to dry and then
harrowed before planting. Ploughing...
-
plants (hilling),
digging narrow furrows (drills) and
shallow trenches for
planting seeds or bulbs.
Weeding with
a hoe
includes agitating the surface...
- “
furrow followed free”
to mimic the
sound of the wake left
behind a ship.
Poetic rhythm is the flow of
words within each
meter and
stanza to produce a...
-
prefixes commonly used in the
English language from P
to Z. See also the
lists from
A to G and from H
to O. Some of
those used in
medicine and
medical technology...
-
through a succession of land-images, for instance: "The ship tore on;
leaving such
a furrow in the sea as when
a cannon-ball, missent,
becomes a ploughshare...
-
looking worried and
furrowing her brow and
screaming and
gazing worriedly at her
flickering flashlight".
Sossamon signed on as
a series regular on CBS'...
-
reading a book
called "Reading
While Waiting",[citation needed] as he
waited for someone).
Other examples include "How
to Do
a Spit Take", "How
to Furrow Your...
- (magi)
traditionally used
a knife (kaplo),
a spear (or
stick with
a nail on the end), or even the forefinger,
to draw ritual furrows (karsha) for
purpose of...
- 2017-05-07 Breen, C., The
Psalms of the Law, The
Furrow, Vol. 15, No. 8 (Aug., 1964), pp. 516–525 Kirkpatrick,
A.,
Cambridge Bible for
Schools and Colleges...