histoire :mazagan et économie 2
Une récolte tôt peut également être obtenue par dibbling dans les graines en novembre, abritant par un voir
également:
l'armature , et voient dedans également:
Février les transplantant à une frontière chaude. Des récoltes de Successional sont obtenues près voient également:
en semant des variétés appropriées de voyez également:
Janvier à la fin de voient également:
Juin . Toute la culture nécessaire est que le voir également:
- LA TERRE
- La TERRE (un mot commun à langues de Teutonic, cf. Ger. Erde, aarde hollandais, jord de Swed. et de Dan.; en dehors de Teutonic il apparaît seulement dans le Gr. 'pq'e, sur la terre; il a été relié par quelques etymologists à l'ar de racine d'Aryan -, pour labourer, qui est vu dedans
- LA TERRE, FIGURE DE
- LA TERRE, FIGURE DE
- RASSEMBLEZ
- RASSEMBLEZ, ALFRED (1842?
- RASSEMBLEZ, JOHN (1755?1835)
- RASSEMBLEZ, JOHN (1818-1891)
- RASSEMBLEZ, STEPHEN (c. 1594-1655)
- GIGANTESQUE
- GIGANTESQUE (0. mammot de Russ., mod mamant; le mama de mot de Tatar, la terre, dont on le cense être dérivé, n'est pas connu pour exister)
- CHAMP (un mot commun à beaucoup de langues ouest-allemandes, cf. Ger. Feld, veld hollandais, probablement apparenté avec olde d'cO.e. f, la terre, et finalement avec la racine de l'irAaror de gr., large)
- CHAMP, CYRUS OCCIDENTAL (1819-1892)
- CHAMP, DAVID DUDLEY (18O5-1894)
- CHAMP, EUGENE (1850-1895)
- CHAMP, FREDERICK (18O1?1885)
- CHAMP, HENRY MARTYN (1822-1907)
- CHAMP, JOHN (1782?1837)
- LE CHAMP, RASSEMBLENT (183 1906)
- CHAMP, NATHAN (1587?1633)
- CHAMP, STEPHEN JOHNSON (1816-1899)
- CHAMP, CHAMP DE WILLIAM VENTRIS, BARON (1813-1907)
- MARCH
- MARCH (1) (from Fr. marcher, to walk; the earliest sense in French appears to be " to trample," and the origin has usually been found in the Lat. marcus, hammer; Low Lat. marcare, to hammer; hence to beat the road with the regular tread of a soldier: cf.
- MARCH, AUZIAS (c. "1395-1458)
- MARCH, EARLS OF
- MARCH, FRANCIS ANDREW (1825? )
The bean-crop is usually interposed between two crops of wheat or some
other cereal. If spring beans are to be sown, the See also:
land after See also:
harvest is dressed with farmyard manure, which is then ploughed in. In January the soil is levelled with the harrows, and the seed, which should be hard and See
also:
light See also:
are noted pests of the crop. Winter beans come to maturity earlier
than the spring-sown varieties, and are therefore strong enough to resist the attacks of the aphis by the end of June, when it begins its ravages. Field-beans yield from 25 to 35 bushels to the
acre. Phascolus vulgaris, the kidney, French or haricot bean, an annual; See also:
dwarf and bushy in grow th,is widely cultivated in See also:
temper-See also:
ate, sub-tropical and tropical regions, but is nowhere known as a wild plant. It was long supposed to be of See also:
Indian origin, an See also:
idea which was disproved by Alphonse de Candolle, who sums up the facts bearing on its origin as follows :?Phaseolus vulgaris has not been long cultivated in India, the
south-See also:
west of See also:
Asia and Egypt, and it is not certain that it was known in Europe before the See also:
discovery of America. At the latter See also:
epoch the number of varieties in See also:
European gardens suddenly increased, and all authors began to mention them. The majority of the species of the genus exist in South America, and seeds apparently belonging
to the species in question have been found in Peruvian tombs of an uncertain date, intermixed 'with many species, all See also:
American.. Hence it is probable that the plant is of South American origin, It is a See also:
tender annual, and should be grown in a See also:
- BROWN
- BROWN, CHARLES BROCKDEN (1771-181o)
- BROWN, FORD MADOX (1821-1893)
- BROWN, FRANCIS (1849- )
- BROWN, GEORGE (1818-188o)
- BROWN, HENRY KIRKE (1814-1886)
- BROWN, JACOB (1775?1828)
- BROWN, JOHN (1715?1766)
- BROWN, JOHN (1722-1787)
- BROWN, JOHN (1735?1788)
- BROWN, JOHN (1784?1858)
- BROWN, JOHN (1800-1859)
- BROWN, JOHN (1810?1882)
- BROWN, JOHN GEORGE (1831? )
- BROWN, ROBERT (1773-1858)
- BROWN, SAMUEL MORISON (1817?1856)
- BROWN, SIR GEORGE (1790-1865)
- BROWN, SIR JOHN (1816-1896)
- BROWN, SIR WILLIAM, BART
- BROWN, THOMAS (1663-1704)
- BROWN, THOMAS (1778-1820)
- BROWN, THOMAS EDWARD (1830-1897)
- BROWN, WILLIAM LAURENCE (1755?1830)
The alternative is to " dibble " the seed in the furrow See also:
left by the autumn ploughing and See also: cover it in with the harrows; or the land may be ridged with the See also:- DOUBLE
- DOUBLE (from the Mid. Eng. duble, the form which gives the present pronunciation, through the Old Er. duble, from Lat. duplus, twice as much)
- HAND
- HAND (a word common to Teutonic languages; cf. Ger. Hand, Goth. handus)
- HAND, FERDINAND GOTTHELF (1786-185r)
- RICH, BARNABE (c. 1540-1617)
- RICH, CLAUDIUS JAMES (1787-1821)
- RICH, JOHN (1692-1761)
- RICH, PENELOPE, LADY (c. 1562?1607)
- RICH, RICHARD, 1ST BARON RICH (1490?-1567)
- BED
- BED (a common Teutonic word, cf. German Bett, probably connected with the Indo-European root bhodh, seen in the Lat. fodere, to dig; so " a dug-out place " for safe resting, or in the same sense as a garden " bed ")
- MAIN (from the Aryan root which appears in " may " and " might," and Lat. magnus, great)
- MAIN (Lat. Moenus)
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