Harvesters in A Sentence

    1

    Among Batavia's manufactures are harvesters, ploughs, threshers and other agricultural implements, firearms, rubber tires, shoes, shell goods, paper-boxes and inside woodwork.

    2

    Combined harvesters (which enter a field of standing grain and leave this grain piled in sacks ready for shipment), steam gang-ploughs, and other farm machinery are of truly extraordinary size and efficiency.

    3

    Guard your webpages against email harvesters to fight against spam.

    4

    Harvesters cut open the ripe pods from the trees and harvest the seeds and pulp within them.

    5

    In 1893, at Chester, self-binding harvesters and sheep-shearing machines (power) were the appliances respectively in competition.

    6

    Sookie and Bill's attraction grew after she saved him from V harvesters (people who bled out vampires to sell their blood) and he introduced her to the nearby vampire sheriff, Eric.

    7

    Spambots and address harvesters haven't learned how to do this yet.

    8

    The harvesters vary in size according to the character of the land.

    9

    The labour question again became acute in the early years of the 10th century, when, owing to the scarcity of hands and the high rate of wages, selfbinding harvesters were resorted to in England for the ingathering of the corn crops to a greater extent than ever before.

    10

    The new harvesters will reduce the shortage of machinery for the rice harvest in Chokwe district, in Gaza province.

    11

    The spam harvesters that scour the web looking for e-mail addresses always find mine.

    12

    This cross searching is done via specific types of web search engine (also called harvesters ).

    13

    To the temple came the poor farmer to borrow seed corn or supplies for harvesters, &c. - advances which he repaid without interest.

    14

    Two self-propelled reed harvesters costing £ 10,000 each will be bought later in the year.

    15

    Under Saddam, harvesting normally started this month, with a touring fleet of aging combined harvesters.