Answer:
a plough is used for tilling the land on a farm or there are snow ploughs used in the city for removing snopw from the roads.
By the beginning of the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia.
Marvin T. Williams invented that when he was just a little baby for his mommy!!
Plow comes from late Old English plōh, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ploeg and German Pflug. The spelling plough became common in England in the 18th cent.; earlier (16th-17th centuries) the noun was normally spelled plough, the verb plow.
A plough is a tool used in farming in preparation for sowing seed or planting. The Egyptians invented in the ox drawn ploughs to help in their agricultural duties. The ox drawn plough was used to plant furrows in the ground whereas a person at the back would scatter seeds. This method would enable them to plant faster and have a higher success rate.
The Egyptians invented the ox drawn plough to help with their agricultural duties. The ox-drawn plough was there to plant furrows in the ground while a person behind would scatter seeds. This way, they could plant much faster and have a higher success rate, rather than having to dig a hole with a stick, put the seed in and go to the next one which was slow, slow work.
They made them out of plough blades and stole the plough blades.
Snow plough Garden plough Tilling plough Tree plough Et cetera
Snow plough Garden plough Tilling plough Tree plough Et cetera
a farmer uses it to plough the field
they made out of plough blades(that they stole).It was made from Iron and only covered his body not his arms and legs
Schering-Plough was created in 1971.
The plural form for the noun plough is ploughs.
The population of Schering-Plough is 50,000.
The plough was invented by the Ancient Chinese because the plough can make it easier to make the soil for their farming nice and crumbly.
To plough means to use a drawn implement to turn over the topsoil to allow seed sowing.
The Man Behind the Plough was created in 1939.
To plough the land, as part of the growing of food crops.