Grapes, they're dried by the sun.
Two symbols found in the play A Raisin in the Sun are a dried up Raisin and an ugly old Sun
Frank O'Grady has written: 'The sun breaks through'
1933
Tingquan Sun has written: 'Nan zheng ji lue' -- subject(s): China, Southern, Description and travel, Southern China
Adobe is the Spanish name for a sun-dried brick.
Adobe is the Spanish name for a sun-dried brick.
A tomato (sun dried or not) is a fruit. For culinary purposes it is a vegetable
YES!!! That's why they put it in the title but, if the word sun maid was NOT in the title it would not be dried in the SUN.
That was when the cavemen sat in the Sun, to get warm, or when they dried their firewood, or their meat, in the sun.That was when the cavemen sat in the Sun, to get warm, or when they dried their firewood, or their meat, in the sun.That was when the cavemen sat in the Sun, to get warm, or when they dried their firewood, or their meat, in the sun.That was when the cavemen sat in the Sun, to get warm, or when they dried their firewood, or their meat, in the sun.
Richard Hudson Clough has written: 'A qualitative comparison of rammed earth and sun-dried adobe brick'
The plow, sun dried brick, and the wheel.
These sun-dried bricks were called adobe bricks.
its not- actually it is, because it is dried, dead animals and plants from hundreds of years ago. how were they dried up I hear you ask, well they are dried up by the sun.
raisens
Adobe structures are made from sun dried bricks of mud and straw.
Yes. If you split the sentence, the noun or pronoun should carry 2 sentences. She washed the shells. She dried them in the sun. Compound Sentence: She washed the shells and dried them in the sun.