Maize (Zea mays), or "corn" as we call it in the US, was almost certainly used in Biblical times, but not in Biblical locations. Maize, or at least a close relative, was certainly being cultivated by mesoamerican cultures around Biblical times, regardless of Old or New Testament times. The word "corn" is used numerous times in the King James version of The Bible, but it's used as a general, all-inclusive word to refer to the grain from any of a number of cereal grasses, most likely wheat or barley. That's why most modern translations do not use the word "corn".
They played with their homemade corn husk dolls usually outside or inside. Or they read The Bible with their mothers and fathers.
No. Corn was known only in the Americas until Europeans brought it to Europe and, eventually, to the remaining parts of the world.
Popcorn, sweet corn, caramel corn, white corn, Indian corn, cornstarch, corn, corn husk, corn stalks, corn cakes, peppercorn, unicorn, corner, corn bread, cornucopia, roasted corn, grilled corn, yellow corn, buttered corn, baby corn, corn muffins, candy corn, corn silk, corny jokes, canned corn, corn pone, corn soup, corn sugar, blue corn, cornmeal, corn oil, corn maze, corn mash, acorn, cornerstone, steamed corn, Mexican corn, corn on the cob, butter and sugar corn, creamed corn, cream of corn, ear of corn, salted corn, corn feild, seed corn, corn salad, kettle corn, jimmy cracked corn, corn frozen corn, corn syrup, and corned beef. 😃
no corn maby corn
A kernel of corn. Candy corn contains corn syrup which is not real corn, but a product manufactured from corn starch.
Flint corn is just one of the types of corn, like sweet corn, dent corn, or waxy corn.
From corn.
Corn bread, corn muffins, nachos, corn tacos, corn chips, Chinese corn soup, are some of the foods you can make from corn.
No, corn meal and corn flour are not the same. Corn meal is coarser in texture and made from ground corn kernels, while corn flour is finer and made from the whole corn kernel.
No, corn meal and corn flour are not the same. Corn meal is coarser in texture and made from ground corn kernels, while corn flour is finer and made from finely ground corn.
No, gm corn is not different than regular corn, not really anyway. Genetically modified corn is corn that does not come from an average corn seed.
All sorts of products, from corn meal, corn flour, corn starch, corn gluten, corn syrup and corn oil, to cereal, the sugar found in most junk foods, salad dressing, beef, chicken, dairy products, potato chips, coca-cola and other soda drinks, corn-on-the-cob, corned beef, and frozen corn.