2. Verb. Third person singular simple present of ''to furrow.'' ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Furrows
1. furrow [v] - See also: furrow
Lexicographical Neighbors of Furrows
Literary usage of Furrows
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Young Mill-wright and Miller's Guide: Illustrated by Twenty-eight by Oliver Evans, Cadwallader Evans, Thomas Ellicott (1860)
"DIRECTIONS FOR LAYING OUT THE furrows I\ THE STONES. If they be 5 feet in diameter,
divide the skirt into 16 equal parts, called quarters; if 6 feet, ..."
2. Water Resources, Present and Future Uses by Frederick Haynes Newell (1920)
"With experience the irrigator has become able to apply water to crops which are
cultivated in furrows without resorting to such expensive means. ..."
3. The California Fruits and how to Grow Them by Edward James Wickson (1914)
"Where one to four furrows are used, these are large furrows, ... Large furrows
are made with the double-moldboard plow, or with a single plow followed by ..."
4. Journal of Morphology by Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology (1897)
"The second cleavage really consists of two quite independent furrows ; their ...
These furrows begin to form near the animal pole and run out around and ..."
5. The Early Embryology of the Chick by Bradley Merrill Patten (1920)
"This determines that the two second cleavage furrows will be at right angles to
... Since these two second cleavage furrows lie in the same plane and are ..."
6. Travels in North America in the Years 1841-2: With Geological Observations by Charles Lyell (1845)
"Recent Glacial furrows at Cape Blo- midon.—Loaded Ice.—Ice-Ruts in Mud. ...
This surface was crossed by furrows about a quarter of an inch deep, ..."