释义 |
noun luːˈsəːnluˈsərn another term for alfalfa Example sentencesExamples - We put in irrigation and grew lucerne on the second farm to feed the sheep on the main farm.
- Bails of lucern, donated by farmers in the Maclear and Ugie areas, were due to be stockpiled for distribution later.
- Conversion of common land to enclosures made possible new practices: creating water meadows and growing new crops such as sainfoin and lucerne to augment supplies of animal winter fodder.
- Only in Flanders and a few contiguous districts was grain rotated with soil-restoring fodder crops, such as clover, lucerne, and sainfoin, and fallow thus eliminated.
- Dams were one solution, both to slake the thirst of livestock and to feed patches of green lucerne for ostriches.
- Our observations may better correspond to those of Baumont et al. who reported greater intake of lucerne than mixed grass hay by sheep.
- They are looking currently for high protein hay, and that would be lucerne, vetch and clover hay and those stocks are dwindling.
- Some green manures, legumes such as lucerne and field beans, also have the ability to take nitrogen from the air and fix it into nodules in their roots.
- Living on an irrigation property on the banks of the Murray River, Ray's childhood was spent on the farm helping with flood irrigation, fencing, harvesting lucerne, shearing and crutching.
- It would be extremely useful if pasture legumes like lucerne and sub clover could be modified to utilise some of this large reservoir of currently unavailable phosphorus.
- Ergot is a fungus that grows on lucerne or barley.
- There are about 800 water licences to extract Lachlan water, mostly belonging to family farms growing lucerne, wheat, hay and in recent years maize.
- The slugs also preferred the leaves of lucerne, white clover and lupins, to the wheat plants.
OriginMid 17th century: from French luzerne, from modern Provençal luzerno 'glow-worm' (with reference to its shiny seeds). proper nounluːˈsəːnluˈsərn A resort on the western shore of Lake Lucerne, in central Switzerland; population 58,381 (2007). German name Luzern
Rhymesadjourn, astern, Berne, burn, churn, concern, discern, earn, fern, fohn, kern, learn, quern, Sauternes, spurn, stern, Sterne, tern, terne, Traherne, turn, urn, Verne, yearn nounluˈsərnlo͞oˈsərn another term for alfalfa Example sentencesExamples - Our observations may better correspond to those of Baumont et al. who reported greater intake of lucerne than mixed grass hay by sheep.
- Living on an irrigation property on the banks of the Murray River, Ray's childhood was spent on the farm helping with flood irrigation, fencing, harvesting lucerne, shearing and crutching.
- Ergot is a fungus that grows on lucerne or barley.
- Some green manures, legumes such as lucerne and field beans, also have the ability to take nitrogen from the air and fix it into nodules in their roots.
- It would be extremely useful if pasture legumes like lucerne and sub clover could be modified to utilise some of this large reservoir of currently unavailable phosphorus.
- There are about 800 water licences to extract Lachlan water, mostly belonging to family farms growing lucerne, wheat, hay and in recent years maize.
- Conversion of common land to enclosures made possible new practices: creating water meadows and growing new crops such as sainfoin and lucerne to augment supplies of animal winter fodder.
- The slugs also preferred the leaves of lucerne, white clover and lupins, to the wheat plants.
- Only in Flanders and a few contiguous districts was grain rotated with soil-restoring fodder crops, such as clover, lucerne, and sainfoin, and fallow thus eliminated.
- They are looking currently for high protein hay, and that would be lucerne, vetch and clover hay and those stocks are dwindling.
- Dams were one solution, both to slake the thirst of livestock and to feed patches of green lucerne for ostriches.
- We put in irrigation and grew lucerne on the second farm to feed the sheep on the main farm.
- Bails of lucern, donated by farmers in the Maclear and Ugie areas, were due to be stockpiled for distribution later.
OriginMid 17th century: from French luzerne, from modern Provençal luzerno ‘glowworm’ (with reference to its shiny seeds). proper nounlo͞oˈsərnluˈsərn A resort on the western shore of Lake Lucerne, in central Switzerland; population 58,381 (2007). German name Luzern. |