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How To Use Furrow In A Sentence

  • Across the upland above the cliff a ploughman drove leisurably forth and back, and always close behind his heels the earth was white with these birds inspecting the fresh-turned furrow. The White Wolf and Other Fireside Tales
  • The birds spread across a rising slope of snow furrowed with ditches worn by thousands of penguin feet.
  • Her face was furrowed with impatience, and she looked, then, almost my own age, middle twenties, instead of like a full-time high-school cutter of classes.
  • Hoe drills, especially those with wider row spacing, can plant seed deeper because they can build a ridge and plant in the furrow.
  • The length of the acre, forty rods, has given rise to one of the familiar units of length, the furlong, that is, a "furrow-long," or the length of a furrow. An Introduction to the Industrial and Social History of England
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  • In-furrow inoculants were developed in part to keep inoculants away from chemically treated seed and are recommended when seed treatments are used.
  • The shallow planting resulted from the planter not adequately cutting through heavy corn and soybean residue and properly placing the seed in the furrow.
  • Previously they were left to lie fallow allowing rainwater to collect in the plough furrows.
  • These striations are minute furrows or depressed lines, and form one of the characters of the species, being much more prominent than on the cap of the ink-cap. Studies of American Fungi. Mushrooms, Edible, Poisonous, etc.
  • The man's face is set in a displeased grimace, his brow furrowed in certain displeasure.
  • That should sort out our furrowed brows. The Sun
  • It ripples and furrows, drips in long trails, gathers in gritty, crusty patches.
  • Here it presents a series of radially arranged furrows, in which the ciliary processes are accommodated and to which they adhere, as is shown by the fact that when they are removed some of their pigment remains attached to the zonula. X. The Organs of the Senses and the Common Integument. 1c. 2. The Refracting Media
  • The sled slews to the side, plowing a furrow in the trail-crust.
  • The ground is frozen, thin ice covers the puddles between the furrows of the empty gray field.
  • It is somewhat viscid when moist, and the margin is very thin and strongly striate and tuberculate, i. e., the ridges between the marginal furrows are tuberculate. Studies of American Fungi. Mushrooms, Edible, Poisonous, etc.
  • Then came those pesky furrow lines. The Sun
  • The fine straight lines radiating outward are remnants of the little furrows left by a seed drill or an air seeder.
  • McCarthy's angular face, a weather-beaten mask of crags and furrows, hides an inner core filled with Yorkshire steel and Irish charm.
  • His voice was thick; stress sewed together the furrows between his eyes. A DAYSTAR OF FEAR
  • Ripping is done in narrow bands or planting furrows at a regular interval from each other in dry season.
  • The caps are very irregular in shape, curved, repand, radiately furrowed, sometimes zoned; gray, or hair-brown in color, with a perceptibly hairy surface, the hairs running in lines on the surface. Studies of American Fungi. Mushrooms, Edible, Poisonous, etc.
  • Most farmers still ploughed the land in the English manner with deep and complete turned furrows.
  • Rams-horne, or else with some piece of soft Ash woode: and you shall obserue that it stand plaine, flat, and leuell, without wrying or turning either vpward or downeward: for if it runne not euen vpon the earth it will neuer make a good furrow, onely as before I said, the point must looke a little downeward. The English Husbandman The First Part: Contayning the Knowledge of the true Nature of euery Soyle within this Kingdome: how to Plow it; and the manner of the Plough, and other Instruments
  • Applying one to two inches of water after the seed has been planted will cause soil particles to dislodge and move from the tops of soil ridges into the seed furrow.
  • The use of liquid insecticide placed in the furrow with the seed has gained in popularity over the last few years as a convenient and inexpensive method to achieve wireworm and seedcorn maggot control.
  • Slug injury to corn may occur before emergence due to feeding activity on the seeds in the furrow or to severe defoliation soon after emergence.
  • Ploughing a wide furrow, this record draws on a history of influences from hip hop, funk, soul, and big beat.
  • They are born actors, able to furrow their brows in concentration and not think twice about how the neighbors might view this seeming eccentricity.
  • The sheets are bilobed about a median furrow, visible in both vertical and horizontal sections, and form straight to gently curved, cross-cutting traces.
  • His hair is oiled and groomed into a beehive topknot; his high, unfurrowed forehead is punctuated with a round caste mark.
  • On either side of the posterior median sulcus, and at a short distance from it, the posterior nerve roots are attached along a vertical furrow named the posterolateral sulcus. IX. Neurology. 3. The Spinal Cord or Medulla Spinalis
  • A resident of Brewery Gulch, the infamous canyon furrowing north from downtown, decided to spray a beehive wedged in an old brick warehouse.
  • Even the bark is impressive, with furrows 6 inches deep and a burl 5 feet across.
  • I'm 33 years young with a well-earned furrow between my brows.
  • Cay drew the name Lilith in the mud by the pond with a stick, then pulled the stick across it, making deep furrows. Judge deveraux
  • Yes, it makes Sean Kingston's Beautiful Girls look like Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands, but Mohombi isn't about furrowing brows, he's about fun with a capital bilabial fricative. Mohombi (No 845)
  • The surfaces of the hemispheres are moulded into a number of irregular eminences, named gyri or convolutions, and separated by furrows termed fissures and sulci. IX. Neurology. 4c. The Fore-brain or Prosencephalon
  • When he finally looked at her again it was with moist eyes and a furrowed brow.
  • The look on his face bothered me; it was an unsmiling, impassive expression with furrowed eyebrows.
  • She is firmly matched in Peter Bowles, a dashing man who carries the world in the furrow of his brow but who radiates genteel grace.
  • He had become quite an old man since I had seen him last; his deeply furrowed, copper-coloured face stood out sharply against his white hair. Punin and Baburin
  • The skin between his eyebrows puckered, furrowing in almost an anxious worriment.
  • The officer furrowed his brow in thought. A Plague of Angels
  • Like leaves before the wind, the boys rushed out by a back door into the play-ground, while the master solemnly passed to his house, with a deep slow bow to the ladies; and there was poor Scudamore -- most diffident of men whenever it came to lady-work -- left to face the visitors with a pleasing knowledge that his neckcloth was dishevelled, and his hair sheafed up, the furrows of his coat broadcast with pounce, and one of his hands gone to sleep from holding a heavy Delphin for three-quarters of an hour. Springhaven : a Tale of the Great War
  • All his life Nelson was profoundly aware of the drudgery of toil, whether on the furrow or the lower deck, and humanely responsive to the concerns of the least privileged.
  • Then he frowned, his brow furrowed in confusion.
  • As nectar is already secreted for her in its receptacle, she thrusts her tongue through the channel provided to guide it aright, and by the slight contact with the furrowed rostellum, it splits, and releases a boat-shaped disk standing vertically on its stern in the passage. Wild Flowers Worth Knowing
  • Deep furrows creased his handsome face as he attached the vital message to the homing pigeon's leg.
  • Suddenly he looked tired and there were deep furrows in his brow.
  • It would be a waste of time, in the present state of science, to controvert this hypothesis, as it is now admitted that even if the rush of a diluvial current, invented for the occasion and wholly without analogy in the known course of nature, be granted, it would be inadequate to explain the uniformity, parallelism, persistency, and rectilinearity of the so-called glacial furrows. The Antiquity of Man
  • Convex, anteriorly truncate glabella tapers forward and is outlined by broad, shallow axial and preglabellar furrows.
  • Evenly broadcast the seeds over an area of the bed or sprinkle them in a shallow furrow.
  • I could tell from the deep furrows in her forehead that she was very disturbed by the news.
  • Another company which has long been ploughing the higher resolution furrow is Printware.
  • Andrew's brow furrows, and he cocks his head slightly.
  • That should sort out our furrowed brows. The Sun
  • Along one side is the lovely green ripple of ridge and furrow pasture, unfortunately a portion has been ploughed.
  • But there will also be some sleep lost, phone calls monitored and brows furrowed over a quite different concern. Times, Sunday Times
  • I didn't catch any frayed bows, just furrowed brows. Times, Sunday Times
  • Arlack possessed a most splendid squint with both eyes, so that it was often observed he would make a capital cook, as he could always keep one eye on the pot while he surveyed the intricacies of the chimney with the other; and, to complete the catalogue of his complexional recommendations, his face was absolutely furrowed, seamed and gashed until it had nearly lost a human shape by the pitiless assaults of the smallpox. Ralph Rashleigh
  • The grooves, the furrows and the crow's feet are still there but my skin is smoother and I feel healthier.
  • ‘I read in a newspaper the other day that Gus discovered me a year ago, playing in a coffee house,’ Smith says, furrowing his brow in the midday sun.
  • The trees are bare, the land is bleak, closed, unproductive and numb, its furrows seemingly incapable of the new life we hope for in the spring.
  • The scratches that the stylus makes are legible, but in order to make them more plain, ink is rubbed upon the surface of the leaves, which fills up the furrows forming the letters.
  • After you prepare a seed bed in your future tomato plot, plant the vetch, either by broadcasting or in shallow furrows at the rate of an ounce of seed per 10 square feet.
  • The sides are marked by numerous ramose furrows, though they are arranged without much order, and being crowded they give the surface a granulated appearance. Report of the North-Carolina Geological Survey. Agriculture of the Eastern Counties: Together with Descriptions of the Fossils of the Marl Beds
  • And owsen frae the furrowed field return sae dowf and weary o, The Lea Rig
  • Menopause adds to the decay, with thinner skin and more wrinkles and furrows.
  • First imagine to yourself a superb position, a steep mountain, bristling with rocks, furrowed with ravines and precipices; upon the declivity is the castle. English Villages
  • His brow furrowed in contemplation, his mind whirling.
  • Of course, in the furrows and stubble of Branagh's pudgily perplexed face, all of this misery was an absolute delight. Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph
  • An old ox makes a straight furrow.
  • Fatigue and stress quickly result in a dull complexion and a furrowed brow.
  • Alan and Tess began to quickly dig another furrow in the sand beside their daughter.
  • Generally, they have templates for fabricating the most important parts such as duckfoot shares for cultivators and furrow openers for the Super Eco seeder. 1. Overview
  • This slender land bridge is furrowed by two parallel mountain ranges and, between them, the cavernous Jordan Valley, itself a northward continuation of Africa's Great Rift.
  • People who take life seriously are easily recognizable for their furrowed brows. Christianity Today
  • Midge's forehead furrowed as she saw that several were drinking.
  • She quieted abruptly and furrowed her brow in concern.
  • His forehead, which was deeply furrowed, bulged in a fashion not without significance for the physiognomist.
  • It has a shorter, more abrupt mould-board, which breaks the furrow but does not bury rubbish so cleanly.
  • His brows were furrowed and his lower eyelid twitched in anger.
  • Tex stared down at the scarlet furrow that had appeared on his forearm and was filled with an ungovernable rage. THE FIVE MILLION DOLLAR PRINCE
  • The 70-acre grassed area has important historical and archaeological features including ridges and furrows of medieval cultivation as well as a rich store of flora and fauna.
  • Melnikov built many extraordinary buildings in Moscow in the twenties and early thirties, but it is to his own house that a path has been furrowed by a constant stream of visitors from all over the world.
  • Where once there was a brow furrowed with two lines, there are now trenches dug from pain, and eyes emptied of hope. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her pubes was a field of wheat after the harvest, a field neatly furrowed; it was a nest, a pomegranate, an arrowhead, a rune. markitymark 1 point 2 hours ago markitymark 1 point 2 hours ago Reddit.com: what's new online!
  • And ooh, I could just see the noses wrinkling and the brows furrowing.
  • his furrowed face lit by a warming smile
  • Given the dry conditions this year, there's likely to be loose soil at the bottom of the furrow which may clog the furrow during the first irrigation.
  • Among the dividends provided by the Public Choice Center, solitude to plow one's own furrow was distinctly absent.
  • At the International Exhibition in 1888-89 his entry of a grain-stripping machine, a furrow plough and iron swingletrees was among those gaining the highest possible award.
  • That night he gave his bed to a mortally wounded staff officer, and tears furrowed his cheeks when he heard of the losses.
  • Trey frowned, furrowed his brows and observed the object of his affections.
  • TAFF (who, asbestas can, wiz the healps of gosh and his bluzzid maikar, has been sulphuring to himsalves all the pungataries of sin praktice in failing to furrow theogonies of the dommed). Finnegans Wake
  • The furrows are over an inch deep and it is far too dangerous to play on, it would be very easy for someone to break their leg.
  • Another sweep along the side of a deep furrow produced a rusted iron belt-buckle of unusual design.
  • At Flint Hall there is a cricket pitch which retains its ridge and furrow ripples, painful for fielders.
  • ‘Be careful of that stuff,’ he told me in his kindly way when the topic came up during one of our first conversations, a frown furrowing his brow.
  • It is also interesting to see that specimens of the latter group invariably show smooth surface and indistinct dorsal furrows.
  • Her brow furrowed and her scorning frown deepened as she glowered at him angrily.
  • The universe, once clean and consistent, was becoming a mottled, furrowed, anisotropic mess due to the opposing compressional and tensile stresses induced by gravitationally attractive and repulsive forces.
  • Scudamore — most diffident of men whenever it came to lady-work — left to face the visitors with a pleasing knowledge that his neckcloth was dishevelled, and his hair sheafed up, the furrows of his coat broadcast with pounce, and one of his hands gone to sleep from holding a heavy Delphin for three-quarters of an hour. Springhaven
  • I hope to see polar bears too, but witnessing the ocean solidified into blocks that creak and growl as the ship's ice-strengthened hull ploughs a furrow is enough of a treat.
  • Midge's forehead furrowed as she saw that several were drinking.
  • His brows furrowed and he went back to hammering a wood slat on the house.
  • When machine seeding, plant in a shallow furrow or spread seeds out and disk them into the soil.
  • I resume brushing the knots and tangles out of his hair and furrow my brow, once again in deep contemplation.
  • The view was of a hilly allotment site with sheds and a railway station, and slimy, furrowed mud.
  • Oral fossa: in Mallophaga, a furrow lying in front of the mandibles. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
  • If his character needed to express perturbation, Reagan furrowed his brow.
  • Well, two of my local councillors showed up - both dapper chappies, a younger bloke with a furrowed brow and an older gentleman with the finest quiff I have ever seen on a man over 60.
  • ‘I suppose I should provide you with some information,’ he said quietly as his brow furrowed into a deep frown.
  • At times and in places, peasants were scratching the dismal surfaces with the sort of plows which Abel must have used, when subsoiling was not yet even a dream; and between the plowmen and their ox-teams it seemed a question as to which should loiter longest in the unfinished furrow. Familiar Spanish Travels
  • Body broadly ovate, elevated and truncate posteriorly; back oblique; dorsal impression lanceolate; scutab area very slightly excavated; ambulacral spaces broad, triangular, depressed; interambulacral spaces slightly convex; anteal furrow broad and shallow, sides slightly gibbous; sub-anal impressions broadly ob-cordate; post-oral spinous space broadly lanceolate. Report of the North-Carolina Geological Survey. Agriculture of the Eastern Counties: Together with Descriptions of the Fossils of the Marl Beds
  • Brow furrowing, Shanza looked to the ground as they spent the rest of their walk pacing down the hallway in burdened but companionable silence.
  • He furrowed his protoplast brow that looked as youthful as it had a century ago. Man Made
  • A couple of furrows wrinkled the fur at the bridge of his muzzle and he flicked a quick gesture at the nearby guards; they moved to keep orbiting petitioners at bay.
  • A perspiring signor rose, mopping his forehead with a white linen handkerchief, his brow furrowed with worry. THE FAMILY
  • A little below the apex, and near the anterior border of the gland, is a short furrow termed the hilum, from which the suprarenal vein emerges to join the inferior vena cava. XI. Splanchnology. 1F. The Chromaphil and Cortical Systems
  • To explore the fields of the firmament with his telescope, gave him intenser pleasure than the most faithful farmer ever realized from furrowing his fields in the dewiest spring mornings. Daring and Suffering: A History of the Great Railroad Adventure
  • Lisa's head snapped to the left as she took in his form with surprise before her brows furrowed in pain.
  • THE corrugators, by their contraction, lower the eyebrows and bring them together, producing vertical furrows on the forehead -- that is, a frown. The expression of the emotions in man and animals
  • To him I reported every detail that occurred when he was not with me; and he, with furrowed brows, sitting darkling by the hour, like a patient spider unravelled the tangle and spun the web afresh. Chapter 15
  • The lunar-like landscape of Mt. Batok to the left has symmetrical furrows resembling a gigantic orange squeezer.
  • The land is flat, sometimes undulating as old ridge and furrow pasture; the route passes near a trig point on a rare hillock 250 ft high.
  • What with the likes of Episodes and Louie now ploughing the postmodern furrow, meta-TV seems to have become a common-or-garden comedy genre like satire, surrealism and topical quiz shows. Curb your Enthusiasm – season eight, episode one
  • Many times in the film, an arched eyebrow, a downcast eye (followed by a POV shot), or wrinkled, furrowed brow says a lot more than the witty bon mots that the cast members like to throw about.
  • ‘I asked her a few too many questions, I think,’ Brett replied as a deep furrow creased his brow.
  • He did not merely walk barefoot in the pine needles, but dug his toes in so that they ploughed a shallow furrow.
  • The deep angry remonstrant eyes, the shaggy eyebrows, telling tales of frequent anger — of anger frequent but generally silent — the repressed indignation of the habitual frown, the long nose and large powerful mouth, the deep furrows on the cheek, and the general look of thought and suffering, all combined to make the appearance of the man remarkable, and to describe to the beholders at once his true character. The Last Chronicle of Barset
  • Her brow furrowed in concentration.
  • She was frowning, her brow furrowed, her expression troubled. Etched in Bone
  • This handsome box set draws together some of the peaks of these years that saw him plow a very musicianly furrow.
  • Sally furrowed her brow and said, “Why do you have to get all wrapped up in labels?” Times Two
  • Then his famous brow furrowed. The Sun
  • Diagnostic characters: The peristome is a narrow furrow which begins, as a rule, close to the anterior end and runs backward along the ventral side, to the mouth, which is usually placed between the middle of the body and the posterior end. Marine Protozoa from Woods Hole Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission 21:415-468, 1901
  • A musket ball whined past my ear and gouged a furrow in the trunk of a tree.
  • Wheat grains possess a furrow running along the length of the kernel with a vascular bundle embedded at the bottom.
  • Most of the women he'd known had been earthbound, living their lives in a well tilled furrow. THE SOUND OF MURDER
  • On the medial side of the process is a deep groove, the mastoid notch (digastric fossa), for the attachment of the Digastricus; medial to this is a shallow furrow, the occipital groove, which lodges the occipital artery. II. Osteology. 5a. 4. The Temporal Bone
  • Her brow furrowed in confusion, but then her eyes flashed with anger again.
  • Buncan tried to picture the great rhino dragging a plow, furrow after endless furrow, while some ill-tempered fanner trailing behind berated him with orders and curses in equal measure. The Lives of Felix Gunderson
  • It is to be propitiated rather than harnessed: young couples make love in the newly ploughed furrows at seedtime as imitative magic to guarantee fertility.
  • Does he live there?" asks the black bonnet of the gray coat; and the hard-featured farmer reins up his grateful dobbin to inquire what you are doing where he sees no manure in the furrow, and recommends a little chip dirt, or any little waste stuff, or it may be ashes or plaster. Walden~ Chapter 07 (historical)
  • The superficial dividing lines between the different cells, which come from the repeated segmentation of the ovum, look like deep furrows on the surface, and hence the whole process has been given the name of furcation. The Evolution of Man — Volume 1
  • It depletes with age, explains Stephanie, so collagen injections can reverse this and fill out the lines and facial furrows left behind.
  • A fluid together with its entrained load moving over a cohesive bed erodes longitudinal furrows or grooves when the stress exceeds the critical erosion velocity.
  • The government is more than adept at ploughing its own diplomatic furrow.
  • This all goes out the window when you get into a furrow situation because the track is square in section and the furrow isn't.
  • And chronic stress and anxiety can lead to frown lines and a furrowed brow.
  • The mountains of western Anatolia extend from east to west and form a horst-graben system with deep furrows created by rivers such as the Edremit, Bakırçay, Gediz, Küçükmenderes and Büyük Menderes. Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests
  • The broad dorsal furrow (Rf) formed by the medullary plate (m) is still wide open, but is divided from the lateral horn-plate (h) by the parallel medullary swellings, which eventually close. The Evolution of Man — Volume 1
  • The Flexor carpi ulnaris determines the contour of the medial border of the forearm, and is separated from the Extensor group of muscles by the ulnar furrow produced by the subcutaneous dorsal border of the ulna; its tendon is evident along the ulnar border of the lower part of the forearm, and is most marked when the hand is flexed and adducted. XII. Surface Anatomy and Surface Markings. 11. Surface Anatomy of the Upper Extremity
  • Inside, my furrowed brow was soon soothed. Times, Sunday Times
  • My father used to tell of the lovely sound made by a horse-drawn mouldboard plough as it turned the furrow (not to mention the delicious smell).
  • He saw it first in his father's eyes, a cloud of confusion that also furrowed his brow. AMAGANSETT
  • The first cleavage furrow initiates at the animal pole and progresses vegetally in a roughly meridional plane. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • At my every punchline the nervous titters grow fewer, the expressions in the front row more furrowed and quizzical.
  • Then plant vetch seed, either in furrows or by broadcasting.
  • furrowed fields
  • Again the rope whistled in the air, again it grided across the boy's naked back, and once more the crimson furrow bore witness to the violent laceration. Eric, or Little by Little
  • Then came those pesky furrow lines. The Sun
  • Within the vast enclosure of the Altar to the God of Agriculture, the Emperor ploughed the first annual furrow to bless the earth and preserve its fertility.
  • And chronic stress and anxiety can lead to frown lines and a furrowed brow.
  • He hoed furrows three feet apart, ar­ranged a flexible plastic pipe to the highest point in the field, and irrigated the dry ground to the north so it could get used to moisture it had never experienced except as rain. Alba
  • I stared closely at it, a frown furrowing my brow.
  • A tiny furrow appeared in her forehead until she frantically ironed it away. Times, Sunday Times
  • There are several English teachers at the school, but Jeanne continues to plough a lonely furrow, teaching French and German.
  • The furrowed brows and grave tones of newsfolk over helicopter shots of people gathered outside the courthouse is laughable. Archive 2008-04-01
  • ‘Bam, bam, bam,’ he sings, knees flexing, brow furrowed in concentration.
  • This had the effect of creating raised areas separated by troughs or furrows, the whole having a marked S-shaped form in plan with headlands for turning the plough at either end.
  • Unlike most pools, this one was filled to a depth of one meter with clean, white sand, its surface raked smooth, leaving small furrows, perfectly spaced.
  • Here is the Miro with its trademark furrowed brow. Observe how the soft lighting in this photograph does nothing to soften the Miro's expression.
  • Unlike Derwenthorpe there would be no risk of flooding, no destruction of ancient ridge and furrow meadows and hedgerows and no damage to wildlife habitats.
  • The steep, slimy furrows might be an image of the surface of your brain, covered by the infected membrane.
  • Tom furrowed his brow and tapped a few keys on his computer.
  • The chief characteristic is the peristome, which is not a furrow, but a broad triangular area deeply insunk and ending in Marine Protozoa from Woods Hole Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission 21:415-468, 1901
  • But like those in the first, they sow this new seed in traditional furrows and with traditional plows.
  • A yoke on oxen prevents them from moving away from each other so that they plough the furrow correctly.
  • The field was furrowed, ploughed, but nothing was growing, not at this time of year.
  • They made tea sometimes of the tormentil, whose little yellow flowers appear along the furrows. Round About a Great Estate
  •  But how we do it,  we get the Saudi delegate who's now accepting the finger pressure of the Dude to have a little furrow on her brow to show she's surmising that what makes it possible must be total FEAR. Is Von
  • Nawin looked directly into the man's incarnadined, sun burnt face and his furrows of coarse wrinkling skin, and the old man, though abashed, grinned and nodded once as if grateful that the younger man not only acknowledged his existence but saw his worth in it. An Apostate: Nawin of Thais
  • And then there's the repulsive triplewart seadevils, covered with spines and furrows and warts, their large mouths set in a perpetual frown.
  • The 26-yearold talks, furrow-browed, about his approach to acting. Times, Sunday Times
  • The caps are very irregular in shape, curved, repand, radiately furrowed, sometimes zoned; gray, or hair-brown in color, with a perceptibly hairy surface, the hairs running in lines on the surface. Studies of American Fungi. Mushrooms, Edible, Poisonous, etc.
  • The younger clanswoman had returned to lean in the inner doorway, arms folded, brow furrowed, remarking, `Do you think she is the one? A PLAGUE OF ANGELS
  • On the right superciliary ridge is observable an oblique furrow or depression, indicative of an injury received during life. 56 56 Essays
  • She pursed her lips, her brow furrowed with worry. Haven
  • The anteriormost region was the cephalon and was constructed from segments that were commonly demarcated by lateral furrows in the glabella (the stomach capsule), but which were fused together.
  • The rhinencephalon appears as a longitudinal elevation, with a corresponding internal furrow, on the under surface of the hemisphere close to the lamina terminalis; it is separated from the lateral surface of the hemisphere by a furrow, the external rhinal fissure, and is continuous behind with that part of the hemisphere, which will ultimately form the anterior end of the temporal lobe. IX. Neurology. 2. Development of the Nervous System
  • But like those in the first, they sow this new seed in traditional furrows and with traditional plows.
  • My heart went out to her, and I furrowed my brow in concern.
  • On the dark landing of her dreams there is that ploughshare which furrows the floor of her house going from the sink to the bed where women and cats whelp to the great relief of the canary who announces births
  • The Super Eco is adapted to the draft power of the donkey (25 -30 kp) or horses (35 - 40 kp): with coulter, furrow opener and duckfoot shares it requires 20 kp on sandy soil and 30 kp on soils with a higher clay content (Havard, 1988a). 1. Overview
  • John struggled to lift his head as his back plowed a furrow across Kathy's lawn.
  • [ASTARTE CONCENTRICA] Shell small, thick, triangular, compressed, concentric; furrows close and regular; umbones acute, recurved; margin crenate. Report of the North-Carolina Geological Survey. Agriculture of the Eastern Counties: Together with Descriptions of the Fossils of the Marl Beds
  • The fine straight lines radiating outward are remnants of the little furrows left by a seed drill or an air seeder.

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