a bundle of wheat
A sheaf.
The farmer needed a bundle of sheaf to complete the ingredients a friend has asked for. sheaf: (a bundle of wheat)
The farmer needed a bundle of sheaf to complete the ingredients a friend has asked for. sheaf: (a bundle of wheat)
A bundle of wheat is called a sheaf. The plural is sheaves.
a bundle of wheat
Wheat is a form of grass. Like grass, it grows in individual stalks with the actual edible wheat at the top of the stalk. Each stalk is tall. You cut it off at the bottom. It is very hard to carry a bunch of stalks if they are loose so the farmer ties a whole lot of them together, making a big bundle. Each bundle can then be tossed onto a vehicle and taken to the place where the important parts are removed for human use. That tied-together bundle is the "sheaf".
The noun bundle is a collective noun for:a bundle of asparagusa bundle of banknotesa bundle of firewooda bundle of joya bundle of newspapersa bundle of ragsa bundle of papersa bundle of sticksa bundle of trouble
Yes, the noun 'bundle' is a standard collective noun for:a bundle of asparagusa bundle of firewooda bundle of joya bundle of ragsa bundle of papersa bundle of sticksa bundle of trouble
$20 = $500/bundle; $10 = $250/bundle; $5 = $100/bundle; $1 = $25/bundle $100 = ?/bundle
The word bundle is both a noun and a verb. Bundle as a verb: Please bundle those sticks for me. Bundle as a noun: Thank you for the bundle of sticks.
Bundle is a noun (a bundle of something) and a verb (to bundle something).