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unploughed การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The unploughed features of The Desert are unique for Denmark, as well as for this part of Europe.
  • As a result, the boundary between the A and B horizons can be ill defined in unploughed examples.
  • Because the ground is so uneven, High Common remained unploughed for centuries and was only used for grazing.
  • Unploughed soils hang on to carbon that would otherwise escape into the air as carbon dioxide when organic matter rots.
  • The fields have remained unploughed for four hundred years, and the sale of the land for farming would have destroyed this history.
  • In unploughed situations there may be a " mor " humus layer in which the surface organic matter is only weakly mixed with the mineral component.
  • The corpse roads or ways were left unploughed and it was considered very bad luck if for any reason a different route had to be taken.
  • The site is unploughed calcareous grassland which has diverse flora such as horseshoe vetch and felwort in drier areas, and devil's bit scabious and fen bedstraw in wetter ones.
  • The habitat and range of pygmy bluetongues is very restricted, as individuals live in old spider burrows within areas of unploughed native grasslands, which have become rare due to extensive development of cereal cropping throughout the region.
  • The " Shatapatha Brahmana "'s commentator, indologist, interpreted the Ahalya of the " subrahmanya " formula not as a woman, but literally as " yet unploughed land ", which Indra makes fertile.
  • "Large slices of land are left unploughed, as boundaries between the alternate ridges of neighbours, in the same plough-gate; which are a perpetual nursery of weeds, besides the loss of so much land lying waste.
  • Though best known for his work as a computer scientist, Van de Sompel also made music in his earlier life, including two albums, " Unploughed " and " Not a Festschrift-Geschnitzte Figuren, " with his group, Young Farmers Claim Future.
  • Surrounding the village would have been three big fields; these fields were cultivated by peasants who held scattered strips in the many furlongs which made up the fields, every year one of the fields would be left unploughed and would be fertilised by the manure from the local animals.
  • After ploughing one of the long sides of the strip, the plough is removed from the ground, moved across the unploughed " headland " ( the short end of the strip ), then put back in the ground to work back down the other long side of the strip.
  • Visually, across the rows, there is the land ( unploughed part ) on the left, a furrow ( half the width of the removed strip of soil ) and the removed strip almost upside-down lying on about half of the previous strip of inverted soil, and so on across the field.