Threshed corn is corn which the dried grain has been removed from the cob to be used in food production. Originally done by hand, the process of threshing is now mainly done by machine.
Straw or perhaps chaff.
"Ancient people used to winnow their grain by tossing the threshed grain and chaff into the wind to allow the wind to carry away the chaff."
Granary (n)which means a storehouse for threshed grain or animal feed
The word 'granary' refers to a room or storehouse. In the Philippines something is needed to store all of the rice that is grown. The rice is stored in a rice granary.
A thresher or threshing machine is used to thresh grain, which is the act of separation of cereal grain from chaff. But nowadays, grain is threshed in a machine called a combine. A combine (combine harvester) combines the functions of several machines, hence its name. It will cut (harvest), thresh and winnow grain before storing it in a large hopper, which it can empty while moving and continuing to harvest. A link to the Wikipedia article on the combine is provided.
Some sentences using the word 'granary' might include: We asked the feed merchants to deliver the grain to the granary, but they left it outside the barn. The part of Europe where we lived was referred to as The Granary because it was such a huge producer of grain. We're expecting such a big grain harvest this year we'll need to build a bigger granary to store it all once we've threshed it.
Once harvested they must be threshed then fired
Once harvested they must be threshed then fired
In the old days, grain was typically harvested using hand tools like sickles and scythes, which allowed laborers to cut the stalks of crops like wheat and barley. Once harvested, the grain would be gathered into bundles and often threshed by beating the stalks to separate the grains from the chaff. This labor-intensive process was usually done by teams of workers, often during communal harvest festivals. The advent of mechanized equipment in the 19th century, such as the reaper and combine harvester, eventually revolutionized grain harvesting, making it faster and more efficient.
It doesn't have a past tense as it's a noun.
People helped each other harvest and shuck the corn.After the harvest, people in the 1800s threshed the wheat.
It is reaped, threshed and cleaned,then they haul it for field drying, (optional), then temporarily stack/pile it, (also optional) then they bag it.