It is an old cowboy term meaning to beat someone up.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant to beat or thrash thoroughly. The image is of hitting him so hard that all the dirt flies off the plow.
The steel plow is a invention by John Deere in 1837. A steel plow came right after the iron plow and helped farmers because they didn't have to stop and clean their plows from dirt. This helped the farmers because the plow was more efficient and saved them a lot of time.somthing used to dig up soil and other things
just plow it over!!!
clean the plow dudes car windows and he lets u use his plow machiane and manny takes it and uses it to open the laudmat ok?
John Deere was the inventor of the Steel plow. This plow was self cleaning and didn't wear as fast as the iron plow or wooden plow that farmers were using during that time. The Steel plow was also much lighter in weight to the iron plow. In the midwest there was plenty of rich fertile black soil but it was under all the prairie grass that had grown over the years. The wooden plow wouldn't work because it had to be constantly cleaned in order to plow. The steel plow could plow the prairie grass under and self clean the moldboard so the farmer could continue without stopping.
An iron plow is a chinese farming item used to dig up dirt to get to more fertile soil.
The plow cuts into the top layer of soil, carrying the top sod/crop residue and turning it under a layer of clean black soil which can be used for next years crop.
Like plowing a girl? banging her
He wants to plow you
The steel plow was an important invention because it made farmer's lives easier because before John Deere invented it, there was only the iron plow. When farmers plowed the ground, the soil stuck to the iron making farmers have to clean it regularly. The steel plow cleaned itself and relieved the farmer's burdens. It also brought more people too the south.
"Speed the Plow" is a phrase that originated in the 18th century and refers to the act of working diligently. In the context of David Mamet's play "Speed-the-Plow," the title suggests themes of ambition, productivity, and the cutthroat nature of the entertainment industry.
a plow