Which yield did you mean?
It can be 'surrender', if you mean "He refused to yield to his opponent."
It can be 'produce', if you mean, "The farm will yield 50 bushels of corn per acre."
Hope this helps.
Chris made a mine that was yielded poorly.
harvest or crops
Yield.
Depends which 'yield' you mean. Yield as in 'give in or surrender, back down, capitulate, cede, collapse or resign. Or the other meaning of 'harvest or income, produce or profit'
To YIELD , means - you must allow the other traffic to pass before you can go.
Real
The term "yield" can mean two things: to surrender or to produce/provide. An example of the first is to "yield" to a foe on a battlefield, or a competitor. An example of the second is that an acre of farmland may yield a certain amount of a farm crop, or a chemical reaction may yield a certain product. This is confused somewhat by the idiomatic "give in" (surrender, agree) and "give up" which has been used for surrendering but also for provide, as in "the tomb gave up its secrets" or "surrendered its hidden meaning."
Example sentence - The driving instructions indicate yield to pedestrians.
cows yield milk
Yield to stop sign.
Example= Yield to the lord Example 2= the yield sighn
Example sentence - The farmer was not sure how much yield would come from the crop after the hail storm.
The driver that forgot to yield got into an accident.
you spelled yield wrong. when there is a spell check...
should yield.
The sign on the highway warned that you must yield to other vehicles.
That recipe will yield about three dozen cookies. A yield sign is a signal to be careful. To avoid an accident, I chose to yield the right of way. A healthy plant will yield several cherry tomatoes.
ha ha yeild
Tsar Bomba was a thermonuclear device of design yield 100 MT, but a deployed yield of 50 MT.