95 adjectives to describe harvests

From the ruins of the past, from the desolations of decay, new structures will rise, and a new harvest, more abundant than the old, will spring up from the stubble over which Time's sickle has passed.

All children alike can revel in this golden harvest.

On both sides of the wadi olive trees are thickly planted, and on the terraced slopes vines yield a plentiful harvest.

At the beginning of the time for seeding and harvesting religious ceremonies were performed to implore the help of their deities; in June for a bountiful harvest, in September for a rich vintage, and in December for the seeding....

So little has heretofore been done in this field that it has yielded a very scanty harvest for purposes of general study.

And the broad blue sky and the flaming sun were bent on participating in it also, as well as the whole estate, the streaming springs and the fields in flower, giving promise of bounteous harvests.

But three weeks later, when the landscape was wearing its imperial livery of lupin and eschscholtizia, when the fields at night were white with moonflowers, when a glorious harvest was assured, and all beasts and birds and insects were garrulous of love and love's

Thou hadst already garnered an ample harvest; the sickle was yet in thy hand; the newly reaped sheaves lay on the field at thy side, when, as the beams of the setting sun trembled on the horizon, the voice of the Master summoned thee to thine appointed rest.

The bloody harvest was over-rich.

STEWART, RAMONA. Bitter harvest.

Like her brother, she was warm-hearted and compassionate, if we may use the term, to excess; and had she been prepared with the means, the gardener would have reaped a double harvest of donations.

A further piece of weather-lore tells us: "Many rains, many rowans; Many rowans, many yawns," The meaning being that an abundance of rowansthe fruit of the mountain-ashdenote a deficient harvest.

He has a tremendous harvest on his hands.

Unseen harvests: a treasury of teaching.

Who sows the serpent's teeth, let him not hope To reap a joyous harvest.

If he had more dash and less shyness in him, less learned coolness and much more humour in his composition, he would reap a better harvest in both pulpit and general life.

In wet harvests it is sometimes impossible to get it sufficiently dried, and a great deal of corn is thus often spoiled.

Ye forests, bend, ye harvests, wave to Him; Breathe your still song into the reaper's heart, As home he goes beneath the joyous moon.

Nowhere else are babies born in such enormous numbers, and nowhere does death reap such awful harvests.

The plain with temples, cities, walls is filled, And wide canals, and yellow harvests tilled.

That human industry will one day level these forests, drain these swamps, and cover this soil with luxuriant harvests, we may confidently anticipate; but many ages must probably elapse before man, in Africa, can achieve such a victory over nature.

Agriculturists have strong prejudices against the species, and allege, not without reason, that large Crow Crops indicate diminished harvests.

Random harvest.

The boats come to shore, and then there ought to be a tumbling out of the silvery harvest and a gathering of women and a strife indescribable of shrill tongues, and then a long procession of wives and daughters trotting to market, each balancing a great, dripping basket on her comely head, while the husbands and fathers go home to eat and sleep.

SEE Craig, Gerald S. BALL, ALFRED L. Hawaiian harvest.

95 adjectives to describe  harvests