Lexicographical Neighbors of Manurings
Literary usage of Manurings
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Timehri: The Journal of the Royal Agricultural and Commercial Society of by Royal Agricultural and Commercial Society of British Guiana (1897)
"Soils having from -o1 to -o2 % of potash thus soluble may or may not be favourably
affected by potassic manurings, while on soils containing more than the ..."
2. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1884)
"The following manurings were given in each series: No. ... The duplicate manurings
gave reasonably accordant results, and the author estimates the limits of ..."
3. Agriculture in Some of Its Relations with Chemistry by Frank Humphreys Storer (1897)
"No considerable harvest of peas can be got by means of heavy manurings ...
lie noticed that lucern derived no little advantage from abundant manurings. ..."
4. Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England by Royal Agricultural Society of England (1881)
"... as is well known, must either exist in the soil by previous manurings or must
be applied to any root crop if any weight of bulbs is to be looked for. ..."
5. Florida Fruits and how Raise Them by Helen Garnie Warner (1886)
"When the clay is five or six feet or more below the surface, so that manures are
liable to be washed down below the roots, three or four light manurings, ..."
6. Sugar and the Sugar Cane: An Elementary Treatise on the Agriculture of the by Noël Deerr (1905)
"If the soil is in good heart, such applications may realize heavy returns, if
poor such manurings will result in heavy loss. 5. For the maximum return of ..."
7. Sugar: A Handbook for Planters and Refiners, Being a Comprehensive Treatise by John A. R. Newlands, Benjamin E. R. Newlands (1909)
"The application of superphosphate of lime to plant canes gave increased yields
when added to manurings of nitrogen and potash. But little, if any, ..."
8. British Farmer's Magazine (1868)
"... fertility such a covering would give to the land would cause a much earlier
and stronger growth in the spring—in fact, the liquid manurings or the dry ..."