It is hard to carry a bushel of corn, it weighs 56 pounds.
He went to prison for stealing a bushel.
I just got a bushel of flowers.
She picked a bushel of apples from the orchard.
There's the last bushel of corn! I wonder what the price of a bushel of beets would be today.
The plural form of bushel is bushels.
During the food shortage, a bushel of potatoes cost two shillings and sixpence.
John, tie that cord around the bushel of corn; whistle when you're done.
. . . is that a bushel of feathers, a bushel of cotton, a bushel of wheat, or a bushel of lead pellets? (A bushel is a volume, not a weight.)
To be an idependent clause a phrase would need a conjugated verb. i.e "a bushel of apples to take home" is a phrase. "I need a bushel of apples to take home" is a complete sentence.
The singular nouns in the sentence are:bushelmarketNote: The noun 'corn' is an uncountable noun. A partitive noun (also called a noun counter) is a noun used to count or quantify an uncountable noun, such as six ears of corn, a kernelof corn, a bushel of corn, etc.
$3.00/ bushel 1 bushel weighs 32lb.
The abbreviation for a bushel is "bu."