18 Metaphors for produce

The annual produce of the islands was eighteen millions, and it yielded a revenue of four millions annually.

Any way, the produce of native genius will be grand material for the bazaar.

The produce, therefore, consisting of 180 quarters is the result of the labour altogether of 100 men: namely, the 60 first mentioned, and the 40 by whose labour the fixed capital and the seed were produced.

Yes, say many political economists, if they save any part of their incomes, and employ them reproductively; because then an addition is made to the national capital, and the produce is a clear increase of the national wealth.

Strange produce of distant lands are your daily concern, and the four winds meet at your counter with a savour of tar.

If the net produce is that which remains after replacing capital, then net produce is not the only fund out of which accumulation may be made: for accumulation may be made from wages; this is in all countries one of the great sources, and in countries like America perhaps the greatest source of accumulation.

The produce (180 quarters) is still the result of the same quantity of labour as before, namely, the labour of 100 men.

The produce of corn is about sixty bushels on an average per acre, and of wheat about thirty-five; cotton is partially cultivated.

The total annual produce of ginger had been as much as 14,000 centals, but, with the war and excessive supply, the price had gone down, and in the year he wrote (1646) only 4,000 centals had been harvested.

The whole produce, therefore, after replacing the wages of labour, would be clear profit to the capitalist.

The average daily produce of each tree is four bamboos, the interior of which is about three inches and a half in diameter.

With three cows, the produce should be 27 to 30 quarts a day.

Let's hope, at all events, that the produce won't be a cockatrice's egg.

The produce of a male is about 4 oz., and of a female 2 oz.: 2 lbs. of wool, as it comes off the goat's back, may be estimated to make one shawl 54 in.

The annual produce of a country is never any thing approaching in magnitude to what it might be if all the resources devoted to reproduction, if all the capital, in short, of the country, were in full employment.

The produce of a male is about 4 oz., and of a female 2 oz.: 2 lbs. of wool, as it comes off the goat's back, may be estimated to make one shawl 54 in.

The squaws told us that no Indian there could claim any thing but what was contained within his own cabin; that the produce of the land was common property, and that they never quarrelled about its division.

The great staple produce of the neighbourhood is sugar and molasses.

18 Metaphors for  produce