¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Resowing
1. resow [v] - See also: resow
Lexicographical Neighbors of Resowing
Literary usage of Resowing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Report of Observations of Attack of Turnip Fly in 1881 by Eleanor Anne Ormerod (1878)
"Taking loss on seed alone for one resowing; if we take the price of seed at 9d.
per pound, ... Taking loss on one resowing of the same amount of acreage, ..."
2. A Practical and Elementary Abridgment of the Cases Argued and Determined in by Elisha Hammond, Charles Petersdorff (1830)
"80 when the custom was that for two years, when the land was sown, there should
be coin non from th • time of reaping the corn till the resowing, ..."
3. Commercial Arbitration: Being a Compilation of Awards of Arbitration by Horace Arthur Dunn, Henry Probasco Dimond (1922)
"... a quantity of the rice had leaked out in transit, resulting in short weights
and necessitating scaling to even weights, resowing, and in some instances, ..."
4. Farming Industries of Cape Colony by Robert Wallace, Harry Stratford Caldecott (1896)
"... indiscriminate, and general as it used to be, but is confined to certain areas,
which in turn are reconstituted by resowing or replanting. ..."
5. The Forester =: Or, A Practical Treatise on the Planting, Rearing, and by James Brown (1882)
"Such resowing and planting did not always succeed, however, and generally these
operations had to be performed in the third, and even in the fourth year ..."
6. Timber: A Comprehensive Study of Wood in All Its Aspects, Commercial and by Paul Charpentier, Joseph Kennell, tr (1902)
"This mode of exploitation is based upon the natural resowing of the soil. If it
is worked like a coppice, it will be the young sprigs and the root-suckers ..."
7. Timber: A Comprehensive Study of Wood in All Its Aspects, Commercial and by Paul Charpentier (1902)
"This mode of exploitation is based upon the natural resowing of the soil. If it
is worked like a coppice, it will be the young sprigs and the root-suckers ..."