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Harvesting   /hˈɑrvəstɪŋ/   Listen
Harvesting

noun
1.
The gathering of a ripened crop.  Synonyms: harvest, harvest home.



Harvest

verb
(past & past part. harvested; pres. part. harvesting)
1.
Gather, as of natural products.  Synonyms: glean, reap.
2.
Remove from a culture or a living or dead body, as for the purposes of transplantation.



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"Harvesting" Quotes from Famous Books



... themselves in a similar predicament with himself, might use their influence to bring it about. It was a sharp trick to play on those who, now finding the market favorable to their designs in its falling condition, were harvesting a fortune. But what was that to him? Business was business. There was no use selling at ruinous figures, and he gave his lieutenants orders to stop. Unless the bankers favored him heavily, or the stock ...
— The Financier • Theodore Dreiser

... how 'a would sing! How 'a would raise the tune When we rode in the waggon from harvesting By the light ...
— Time's Laughingstocks and Other Verses • Thomas Hardy

... roadside, men and women were harvesting their carrots and other root-crops, especially digging potatoes,—the pleasantest of all farm labor, in my opinion, there being such a continual interest in opening the treasures of each hill. As I went on, the country began to get almost imperceptibly less flat, and there was some ...
— Passages From the English Notebooks, Complete • Nathaniel Hawthorne

... much more charming flower is than fruit, apple-blossom than apple. There are some artistic temperaments that should never come to maturity, that should always remain in the region of promise and should dread autumn with its harvesting more than winter with its frosts. Such seems to me the temperament that this volume reveals. The first poem of the second series, La Belle au Bois Dormant, is worth all the more serious and thoughtful work, and has far more chance of being remembered. ...
— Reviews • Oscar Wilde

... of the cutting of the Danville Railroad still produces despondency with many. But the people are now harvesting a fair crop of wheat, and the authorities do not apprehend any serious consequences from the interruption of communication with the South—which is, indeed, deemed but temporary, as sufficient precaution is taken by the government to defend ...
— A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital • John Beauchamp Jones


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