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  1. 21 mai 2010 · Hi. Basically "harvest" means the action of gathering/hunting/getting something. (definition 1) But "harvest" also means something which is harvested. (definition 2) Crop has close meaning to (definition 2) I think "harvest" has more focus on the process of gathering/getting/hunting, or the amount of harvested products, than "crop".

  2. 7 avr. 2016 · Apr 7, 2016. #2. In the context, as you are talking about time, and [the] harvest (a set time of year) occurs at a particular time, "harvest" seems appropriate. In broad terms, we harvest things that are produced commercially and collect things (usually in smaller quantities) that occur randomly in nature. To harvest is also used to express ...

  3. 1 oct. 2015 · English-US. Oct 1, 2015. #3. I understand "harvested my friendship", Silver, but this phrase is not really part of the English I hear and speak every day. It's too poetic and indirect to be readily understandable. It would be clearer to say that you met your friends at school and have maintained your friendship with those people.

  4. 25 mars 2007 · Religious organizations would use the word 'harvest' in such a sentence but in the context of discussing hunger, food distribution, people's well-being etc. Not in the context of profits, selling, and buying. Those with small farms may indeed interchange the use of harvest and crop more freely here. They also grow a greater variety of crops and ...

  5. 20 avr. 2013 · Apr 20, 2013. #5. "Harvest" is a euphemism. It sounds as if the animal is a crop and crops are unfeeling and for food/other uses. By the use of "harvest", which has pleasant connotations, it is hoped that emotion will be removed from wholesale slaughter - it seems to work. P.

  6. 13 mai 2022 · What I have harvested most from the contest is not the award but the improvement of my pronunciation and the fun of acting. my questions: 1) is "harvest" idiomatic here? My dictionaries do include a figurative meaning of "harvest"---- to gain something as the result of an action. But I don't think this usage is common.

  7. 24 août 2019 · Aug 24, 2019. #3. velisarius said: The biggest difference is that we never talk about "vintage" in connection with grapes for eating. I take it you mean "harvesting of grapes for wine-making". So vintage is used for wine-making? I've also found the term "wine harvest" in the Collins dictionary used by WR.

  8. 25 avr. 2023 · To me it's not a very logical sentence. Crops don't produce a harvest. Crops are the harvest. - The advantage was that crops grown in such areas were not as dependent on rainfall and therefore those areas produced a more reliable harvest. And now the subject is areas.

  9. 31 déc. 2020 · English (Ireland) Dec 31, 2020. #3. The simple answer is no. I would just explain this with a sentence like "don't compare yourself to others". E.

  10. 28 août 2019 · Aug 28, 2019. #2. Yes, you can use all of these verbs with mushrooms. There's little, if any, difference in meaning between them. 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 when picking commercially grown ...

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