Sprout growers are having to take on extra labour because recent poor weather had made it harder to harvest the crop. |
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Sprout seed potatoes before planting, by placing them in trays in a cold greenhouse or frost-proof shed. |
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Friends of Mr Sprout said he had enjoyed a night out on Saturday and was the worse for drink, which might account for his fall. |
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Sprout is Windows powered and can operate using a sensor-laden mat on the desktop appearing like a gigantic mousepad. |
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To complete the tour dates, the band hired Prefab Sprout drummer Neil Conti to fill in. |
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Bare branches grow out of one end, while shoots sprout out from the other, smiling snakes wriggle around and a baby bird emerges from an egg. |
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The capillary grows by degradation of the extracellular matrix and proliferation of cells at the tip of the sprout. |
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Ferns sprout from mossy lintels and trees reach for the sky from small, now-roofless rooms which were the living quarters of slaves. |
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Female reindeer are the only deer species to grow antlers as well as the male, but they only sprout in winter. |
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Skeleton House, pays homage to the shantytowns and favelas that sprout up unbidden on the outskirts of the world's major cities. |
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And here, too, places of worship sprout, Hindu and Buddhist temples, mosques and Sikh gurudwaras. |
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Think of the many promotional news items that will sprout on its pages and channels as a result. |
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Marigolds are easy to grow from seed and sprout in a few days in warm soil. |
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John Keslick, an arborist from Pennsylvania says that you can save a sprout to grow into a new tree in the same spot. |
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Grows satisfactorily from cormlets, because husks of cormlets are very hardy and they sprout very long. |
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It is like the brightness after the rain, making grass sprout from the earth. |
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Corms and cormels that are planted immediately after treatment will sprout within 3 to 4 weeks. |
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Their root-like structures, which are buried just beneath the sandy bottom, can sprout new grass-like leaves. |
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Meanwhile, bulbs and seeds sprout, trees bud, and insects emerge and start consuming the tender foliage. |
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You could use cavolo nero, Swiss chard, kale, sprout tops, spring greens or Savoy cabbage, listed in my order of preference. |
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They sprout in the spring, grow foliage, then produce flowers and finally seeds. |
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As you try to lever them into position, they seem to suddenly sprout extra limbs to match the extra decibels they are producing. |
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In the middle of the white wormy thing, which fills the entire shell, is a green blob about the size of a small sprout. |
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Tied to these are the whippy rose stems, which will soon sprout flowering shoots along their length. |
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If the file becomes popular, copies begin to sprout up around the internet, at no extra cost. |
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Cupola domes and widow's walks sprout from the roofs of buildings, while ornate, old apartment blocks bear names like Haus Hohenzollern. |
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But if two buds of a sympodial branch sprout at the same time, a more or less fork-shaped pattern, a dichasium, is formed. |
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To control crabgrass and dandelions before they sprout, apply a preemergence herbicide. |
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During the spring new plants sprout but their fruits don't immediately ripen. |
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In the field, bulbs sprout after the first rains in the autumn, and plants may flower by the end of winter. |
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The leaves of mangos and cacaos do the reverse, turning scarlet when they first sprout. |
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Chitting describes the process whereby seeds are placed between layers of damp kitchen towel and allowed to sprout prior to planting. |
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With the first rains, leaves sprout on trees and bushes and the savannah grass grows to several yards within a few months. |
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Banyan trees usually sprout at the most unlikely spots, like rooftops, cracks in concrete structures or over walls. |
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Next spring, these cloves will sprout their leaves and start to make new bulbs. |
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The thick succulent stems of spekboom readily sprout when a freshly-cut branch is simply inserted into soil. |
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Since they sprout from perennial caudices, the adder's tongue ferns were presumably established in the chamise understory. |
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Beech is usually quite amenable to hard cutting back, as long as it gets plenty of light it will quickly sprout new shoots from the older wood. |
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We see this person surfing the web, bean sprout sandwich perched precariously on his lap. |
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Angiogenesis, a process by which new blood vessels sprout from existing one, is a prerequisite for outgrowth and metastasis of tumour. |
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An astonishing number of roofs sprout television antennae, and a few houses even sport a satellite dish. |
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Bright yellow in colour, smeared with splodges of red, several seemed to sprout from one stem, almost like a flower. |
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Barley sprout is used in treating food stagnation and strengthening the stomach. |
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The leafy stems, bearing terminal preformed flower buds, sprout from the underground tuberous roots in early spring. |
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Black feathers sprout from her head and, like the bird, she is masked with bits of torn fabric bound around her eyes. |
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Ancient bridle paths sprout afresh as huge jamun trees, wild bamboo and sal give cover along the way. |
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I hate people who pretend to be smart alecks just because they managed to sprout a useless proverb. |
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Our instructor is a bean sprout chewing yogic matriarch who speaks in hushed tones so as not to upset the alignment of her shakras. |
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The newly formed sprout may function as a sink for the low molecular weight products of starch degradation. |
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The barley was first allowed to germinate, or sprout rootlets, in a moist environment. |
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Medieval towers sprout hither and yon, frontages on the titchy streets have a stately aspect, and from the esplanade by the cathedral, the landscape looks mildly Tuscan. |
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The point is to wait until the soil is so chilled that seed cannot sprout, but stays dormant until warming soil and moisture trigger germination in spring. |
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If the basement is too warm, the plants will sprout weak growth. |
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After planting, the seeds sprout and plants emerge more or less normally. |
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Basically those plants that can sprout the quickest and grow the fastest literally shade out their competitors and they're more likely to produce seeds. |
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Mutoko is the starkest example of an African media revolution which has seen a growing number of independent radio stations sprout up across the continent. |
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Wilting shrubs spring back to life and luxuriant grass begins to sprout in the open spaces, even as flower buds burst into blossoms of loveliness. |
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I particularly believed that from the ashes of the unrest we could work to sprout new hope for our community. |
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Her father said before Kurren could grab a bean sprout with her fingers. |
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Very wet soil encourages mature peanuts to sprout in the ground. |
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Can you still tell a silver maple seedling from a bean sprout? |
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For a main course, we ordered Singaporean Laksa at 38 yuan, noodles steamed with heavy coconut milk, prawns, clams, chicken, fried tofu, bean sprout and chili. |
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With the trowel, he dug a little hole, making it just deep enough that the grain sprout would still be able to push through the dirt on top of it. |
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Practical control of premature sprouting in storage is achieved through the use of low temperatures or treatment with chemical sprout suppressants. |
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At what point do you switch priorities from irrigating the existing crops to pre-moistening the fallow fields in preparation for stale bedding or getting your seeds to sprout? |
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Woodpigeons are attacking what is left of the cabbage and sprout crops and damage by rabbits and hares has been reported to apple trees in the area. |
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Enlarged as though in a magnifying mirror, the abundant follicles sprout gut-string stubble as a gentle sleeping smile winks above the prognathous jaw. |
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Besides making yogurt and leavening bread, these dehydrators also can soften honey or butter, re-crisp crackers or popcorn, sprout seeds or hatch chicks. |
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And just for the record, those are sinigrin and sulforaphane which give the hated sprout its pungent taste. |
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Key ingredients in the formulation include Ajuga plant stem cells, saw palmetto, pea sprout bioactives and nettle. |
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The Brussels sprout, which has long been popular in Brussels, and may have originated there, is also named after the city. |
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A sprout of Protestantism in the continental Basque Country produced the first translation of the new Testament into Basque by Joanes Leizarraga. |
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Pathetic Fallacy is a cardboard form riddled with piercings that sprout long tufts of horsehair. |
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More often than not, tomato seeds will sprout even if they are a couple of years old. |
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A growing number of new condominium developments sprout up in Phnom Penh, attracting mainly foreign buyers. |
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Lay a sliced plumcot next to the Brussels sprout leaves and sprinkle with the julienned ginger. |
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After the garlic was lifted I took some red kale, savoy cabbages and Brussel sprout plants from the seedbed and put them in where the garlic was. |
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All you have to do is sow the seeds in a pot of compost, cover with cling film and leave them to sprout indoors on the windowsill. |
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Start with mung beans if you've never tried this because they are the easiest to sprout. |
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These compounds are sinigrin and sulforaphane, which give the sprout its pungent taste. |
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Chitting potatoes simply means making the seed potato sprout before you plant it so they have a head start. |
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Exclude products evoking aerogenesis. Those are beans, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, broccoli sprout, onion, pepper and citrus. |
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By the time they are 36 hours old, the second, outer coat of spines begins to sprout. |
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It is grouped with cabbage, kale, turnip, radish, cauliflower, broccoli, kohlrabi, collard, mustard and brussels sprout as one of the cole crops. |
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After several months of growth and development, these sprout limbs and undergo metamorphosis into tiny toads. |
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A bacterial substance known as indoleacetic acid may play a part in sprout inhibition. |
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If potatoes develop green areas or start to sprout, these areas should be trimmed before using. |
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The team discovered that Wip1 phosphatase is a key factor that causes point mutations to sprout in human cancers. |
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A young planula settles down as a sedentary polyp, which can sprout more polyps, sometimes for several years. |
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When soybeans sprout, they release phytates, which in turn releases the nutrients and softens the bean, making it more digestible. |
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The independence ceremony could not keep the blush of April's revolution, when carnations had seemed to sprout from every buttonhole, from fading. |
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Let stumps not sprout, but harbor and castle, be brainpans for a hive of thought, stirred awake and hungry and taking off for a sweeter elsewhere. |
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It is the only building where the lights shine from windows at night, not far from the lopsided pup tents and dented cardboard boxes that sprout on sidewalks like mushrooms. |
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The burnt stumps also readily sprout new growth from the roots. |
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Any minute now, they will sprout into the alarming-looking stinkhorn. |
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Light sprout morphology of wild tuberiferous Solanum species. |
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And now, a whole new group of people has recolonized the marshlands, just like the new coconut trees that sprout up where old ones were blown over. |
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Soon, the dappled trout lilies sprout tiny bell-like yellow flowers and the stinky, garishly red-petaled trillium transform into jack-in-the-pulpits. |
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Soft corals, sponges and sea fans may sprout from the bottom, but there are few rock piles, ledges, coral heads or anything else that sticks up very high off the sea floor. |
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She suffers from a fear known as lachanophobia, which leaves her sweating and stricken with panic attacks at the merest sight of a sprout or a pea. |
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Grasses sprout on the sands long before the early rains have restored the echard of adjoining clays and given a surplus as chresard which can initiate grass growth. |
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Mekabu is the flowering sprout of wakame. It has a strong, sweet, and creamy taste and is traditionally brewed into a tea or cooked in small amounts with other foods. |
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