In the past week i have read a couple of articles where they use this term, to “harvest an animal”. Grow can be intransitive or transitive. I think what you mean is harness the potential. harvest sounds bizarre.
Harvest Church Broken Arrow
You might use 'harvest' to suggest 'the bounty of nature' in the autumn, when many things ripen and can be harvested. Although, similarly, you could use 'harvest' in a technical sense. It is the time for sowing turnips and peas and for collecting/harvesting courgettes and lettuce thanks in.
Crop is material which is harvested.
I am not sure what you are asking. Pick not up what has fallen from the table. A harvest of the shoots would remove the toxic compounds off site to be burned or composted to recover the metal for industrial uses. Between planting and harvest is the growing season, and after the harvest, but.
This maxim was believed to. Harvest is a name/verb of the action/act to gather and get crops. Hello everybody in this forum. The period between two harvests (at least, of annual crops) is the year.
Whether anything grows as a result of that is another matter.
I was wondering which verb would suit best in this sentence, to harvest or to collect. We can learn a lot from each other if we only harvest the potential of our employees. It means the act of cutting and gathering. Hi here is a maxim ascribed to pythagoras, and i don't understand the underlined in its explanation:
Plant means to put the seeds in the ground. For instance, one article read that “it is illegal to harvest.