WINDROW
\wˈɪndɹa͡ʊ], \wˈɪndɹaʊ], \w_ˈɪ_n_d_ɹ_aʊ]\
Sort: Oldest first
-
Sheaves of grain set up in a row, one against another, that the wind may blow between them.
-
The green border of a field, dug up in order to carry the earth on other land to mend it.
-
To arrange in lines or windrows, as hay when newly made.
By Oddity Software
-
Sheaves of grain set up in a row, one against another, that the wind may blow between them.
-
The green border of a field, dug up in order to carry the earth on other land to mend it.
-
To arrange in lines or windrows, as hay when newly made.
By Noah Webster.
-
A row of hay raked up in a long ridge to dry before being made into piles; any row for drying, as of sheaves of wheat, etc,, before being stacked; dry leaves, dust, etc,, swept by the wind into a long ridge on the ground.
By William Dodge Lewis, Edgar Arthur Singer
Word of the day
basidiomycota
- comprises fungi bearing the spores on basidium: Gasteromycetes (puffballs); Tiliomycetes (comprising orders Ustilaginales (smuts) and Uredinales (rusts)); Hymenomycetes (mushrooms; toadstools; agarics; bracket fungi); in some classification systems considered a division of kingdom comprises fungi bearing spores on a basidium; includes Gasteromycetes (puffballs) Tiliomycetes comprising the orders Ustilaginales (smuts) and Uredinales (rusts) Hymenomycetes (mushrooms, toadstools, agarics bracket fungi).