¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sorghums
1. sorghum [n] - See also: sorghum
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sorghums
Literary usage of Sorghums
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Bulletin by United States Bureau of Plant Industry, Division of Plant Industry, Queensland (1911)
"Four of these counties grow more grain sorghums than corn. SUMMARY OF THE VALUES
OF GRAIN SORGHUM AND CORN IN KANSAS AND OKLAHOMA. ..."
2. Southern Field Crops (exclusive of Forage Plants) by John Frederick Duggar (1911)
"CHAPTER XIII THE sorghums — ANDROPOGON SORGHUM (OR SORGHUM VULGARE) THE sorghums
comprise a very interesting group of diverse sub-species grown over a wide ..."
3. Dry Land Farming by Thomas Shaw (1909)
"GROWING sorghums The sorghums may be classified as sweet and non- sweet, ...
The saccharine sorghums are of the same class, but the non-saccharine are of ..."
4. Forage Plants and Their Culture by Charles Vancouver Piper (1914)
"CHAPTER XIII sorghums SORGHUM (Andropogon sorghum) THE numerous varieties of
sorghum are cultivated in the Old World for three distinct purposes ; namely, ..."
5. Forage Plants and Their Culture by Charles Vancouver Piper (1914)
"CHAPTER XIII sorghums SORGHUM (Andropogon sorghum) THE numerous varieties of
sorghum are cultivated in the Old World for three distinct purposes ; namely, ..."
6. Forage Crops Other Than Grasses: How to Cultivate, Harvest and Use Them by Thomas Shaw (1899)
"The non-saccharine sorghums are a somewhat numerous class. ... The chief of the
varieties of the non-saccharine sorghums grown in this country include ..."
7. Forage Crops Other Than Grasses: How to Cultivate, Harvest and Use Them by Tomas Shaw (1899)
"The non-saccharine sorghums are a somewhat numerous class. ... The chief of the
varieties of the non-saccharine sorghums grown in this country include ..."
8. The Principles of Agronomy: A Text-book of Crop Production for High-schools by Franklin Stewart Harris, George Stewart (1915)
"The sorghums are now replacing them slowly but surely save in a few districts.
Both are by nature dry-weather crops, offering possibilities on the dry-farm ..."