hay acreage - определение. Что такое hay acreage
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Что (кто) такое hay acreage - определение

CENSUS-DESIGNATED PLACE IN PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA, UNITED STATES
The Acreage, FL; The Acreage
Найдено результатов: 342
Haymaking         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
·noun The operation or work of cutting grass and curing it for hay.
haystack         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
¦ noun a large packed pile of hay.
Hay         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
·vi To lay snares for rabbits.
II. Hay ·noun A Hedge.
III. Hay ·noun Grass cut and cured for fodder.
IV. Hay ·vi To cut and cure grass for hay.
V. Hay ·noun A net set around the haunt of an animal, especially of a rabbit.
Haystalk         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
·noun A stalk of hay.
hay         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
1.
Hay is grass which has been cut and dried so that it can be used to feed animals.
...bales of hay.
N-UNCOUNT
2.
If you say that someone is making hay or is making hay while the sun shines, you mean that they are taking advantage of a situation that is favourable to them while they have the chance to.
We knew that war was coming, and were determined to make hay while we could.
PHRASE: V inflects
haystack         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
(haystacks)
1.
A haystack is a large, solid pile of hay, often covered with a straw roof to protect it, which is left in the field until it is needed.
N-COUNT
2.
If you are trying to find something and say that it is like looking for a needle in a haystack, you mean that you are very unlikely indeed to find it.
PHRASE
hay         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
n.
1) to make hay
2) to bundle, gather, stack hay
3) a haystack
4) (misc.) (AE; colloq.) to hit the hay ('to go to sleep')
Hay         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
Hay is grass, legumes, or other herbaceous plants that have been cut and dried to be stored for use as animal fodder, either for large grazing animals raised as livestock, such as cattle, horses, goats, and sheep, or for smaller domesticated animals such as rabbits and guinea pigs. Pigs can eat hay, but do not digest it as efficiently as herbivores do.
Haystack         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
·noun A stack or conical pile of hay in the open air.
hay         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
¦ noun grass that has been mown and dried for use as fodder.
Phrases
hit the hay informal go to bed.
make hay (while the sun shines) make good use of an opportunity while it lasts.
Derivatives
haying noun
Origin
OE heg, hieg, hig, of Gmc origin; related to hew.

Википедия

The Acreage, Florida

The Acreage is an unincorporated community located in Palm Beach County, Florida, United States, with a 2010 US Census Bureau population count of 38,704. It is located in the areas north of Royal Palm Beach and Loxahatchee Groves, and is approximately 18 miles (29 km) northwest of West Palm Beach. Most of the population lives in single-family homes on 1.14 acres (4,600 m2) and larger lots. It straddles the western fringes of the highly developed eastern portion of Palm Beach County and the agricultural-rural western portions. Its large, spacious home site lots, dirt roads and many wooded areas give the area a rural character, although it is widely considered to be an exurban outgrowth of the South Florida Metropolitan Area. The Acreage is located solely within the Indian Trail Improvement District, responsible for maintaining the road and drainage systems within its boundaries.