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Vesta

[ US /ˈvɛstə/ ]
[ UK /vˈɛstɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the brightest asteroid but the fourth to be discovered
  2. (Roman mythology) goddess of the hearth and its fire whose flame was tended by vestal virgins; counterpart of Greek Hestia

How To Use Vesta In A Sentence

  • Large numbers of vestal moths and a few crimson speckled moths, both normally resident in the Mediterranean, have been seen on the south-west and south-east coasts and in Gwynedd.
  • I’ve also read mesopotamian myths that have survived including the Avesta from the Zoroastrians which serves as a foundation of Judaism combined of course with the cult of Amun (the egyptian cult of the one god). Think Progress » As New Orleans Drowned, Chertoff Was Focused On Avian Flu and Immigration
  • Yet despite variable environments, new commercially available maize hybrids continue to be produced each year with ever-increasing harvestable yield.
  • Other species lured by the Indian summer include the distinctive crimson speckled, the dainty vestal moth and Spoladea recurvalis, an extremely rare tropical species. Indian summer sees exotic moths fly in
  • They believe in the Tooth Fairy myth, the myth of the vestal virgin. Penthouse Founder Bob Guccione Dies At 79
  • Major climate limitations include short growing seasons (not enough time to mature or to produce high yields of harvestable crop), lack of heat energy (too few GDDs during the season), long and/or unfavorable winter weather that can limit survival of many perennial crops, and high moisture stress in some areas. Agriculture in the Arctic
  • Like Russia, China and India, the US has enough harvestable wind to do the total job. Harvey Wasserman: Totally Boom/Doom Solartopian Green By 2030
  • The projects include $3.8 million to extend the ARTWalk project in Rochester; $3.1 million to preserve a canal motorship in Albany and more than $2 million for the Vestal Rail Trail in Broome County. Undefined
  • Many fields that are fully mature and nearly harvestable have a high percentage of green-stemmed plants remaining in the field.
  • It is in the Zend-Avesta, primal Japhetic utterance. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 30, April, 1860
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