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dibble

[ US /ˈdɪbəɫ/ ]
[ UK /dˈɪbə‍l/ ]
VERB
  1. make a hole with a wooden hand tool
    dibble the ground
  2. plant with a wooden hand tool
    dibble Spring bulbs
NOUN
  1. a wooden hand tool with a pointed end; used to make holes in the ground for planting seeds or bulbs

How To Use dibble In A Sentence

  • Bloomfield hopes that Isaac will gain such support for his invention of an improved pea/potato dibbler. Letter 227
  • More Cowherd: What Dibble said in the moment, with the information he had was -- we're kind of babying this guy -- [was] the way a lot of people felt. ESPN personalities defend Rob Dibble
  • There is much less danger of leaving a hole with the flat than with the round dibble, which is almost sure to leave a hole beneath the plant. Culinary Herbs: Their Cultivation Harvesting Curing and Uses
  • A dibble was an instrument for poking holes in the ground for planting.
  • Becky Zalmonowsky stood so closely over the lake that she shed the chatelaine bag into its shallow depths and did irreparable damage to her gala costume in her attempts to "dibble" for her property. Americans All Stories of American Life of To-Day
  • The seeds were dibbled at the rate of two seeds per hole at an espacement of 30 cm by 45 cm during the second week of September.
  • Besides, the appreciation of more sort serves also by dibble seeding kind the website is trying.
  • The rugged, multipurpose implement serves as a trowel, dibble, hand fork, and hoe. Avital Binshtock: Grow a Conscience: How to Garden Green
  • Watered by wet-season rains or irrigation, wet-rice fields range from small plots that can only be worked with a hoe or dibble stick to those large enough for a water-buffalo - drawn plow.
  • Windass was coming more and more into it and after a couple of sighters at Dibble's goal he headed home a cross by Crooks - only for the flag to immediately dampen his joy.
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