快好知 kuaihz


plough造句
1. Pen and ink is wit’s plough. 2. Farmers occasionally plough up old Indian relics. 3. If they plough on until it's dark, they would get this field finished. 4. Why don't you plough out all the weeds and plant some vegetables? 5. If we plough on until it's dark, we should get this field finished. 6. In parts of Northern France, farmers still plough up shell fragments and weapons. 7. Diligence is the mother of good plough deep while shuggards sleep,you will have corn to sell and to keep. 8. Two oxen yoked to a plough walked wearily up and down the field. 9. It would pay farmers to plough up the scrub and plant wheat. 10. We possess ten acres of plough. 11. Companies can plough back their profits into new equipment. 12. He yoked the oxen to the plough. 13. The soil had been turned up by the plough. 14. These fields have been under the plough for centuries. 15. Farmers plough in autumn or spring. 16. He has a very large acreage under the plough. 17. We're going to plough the top field next week. 18. You'll never manage to plough through all that food. 19. I had to plough through dozens of legal documents. 20. We must plough on somehow in spite of all the difficulties. 21. The horse-drawn plough is now obsolete in most European countries. 22. It would be a mistake to plough on with this scheme - it'll never work. 23. He was ready to plough down everything that stood in the way of his goal. 24. He that by the plough would thrive himself must either hold or drive. 25. After the vegetables have been harvested,peasants plough the loose leaves into the soil to enrich it. 26. Most staff will never want to plough through the manuals that come with the software. 27. After the wheat crop has been gathered, many farmers burn the remains and plough the ash into the soil , so as to enrich the soil. 28. After months without rain, the ground was too hard to plough. 29. There is a good chance in this area that you might plough up some valuable ancient coins. 30. There are several English teachers at the school, but Jeanne continues to plough a lonely furrow, teaching French and German.