Usually a long container for food which allows several animals to eat from it at once.
The word you''re looking for is... 'trough'. (pronounced 'tr-off'
False. The wavelength of a wave is actually measured from crest to crest, or trough to trough, not from crest to trough.
To measure the distance from one trough to the next trough on a wave, you would measure the wavelength. The wavelength is the distance between two corresponding points on the wave, such as from one trough to the next trough, or from one peak to the next peak.
The distance from one trough of a wave to the adjacent trough is known as the wavelength of the wave. Wavelength is the distance between two consecutive points that are in phase, such as from trough to trough or from crest to crest.
The distance from one trough to the next trough of a wave is measured as the wavelength of the wave. It represents the length of one complete cycle of the wave, which includes one complete oscillation from trough to crest and back to trough.
Barn animals such as horses, pigs, etc.
Napoleon, by not eating from his trough .
only you prombly trough up,but not die
A trough is something that contains food or water. A small animal might be fed from a bowl; a large animal needs a bigger food container. That's a trough. A visual: you know how in movies set in the American West, after a fight, somebody ends up in the water container the horses were drinking out of? That's a water trough.
Trough
It's not Throff, but TROUGH --> T-R-O-U-G-H.
Yes.have you ever put a fish in a water trough to eat the algie but they also eat the oats that the horses eat.
"Pigging out" brings to mind a hungry pig rooting around in the food trough, eating whatever it finds. It's an idiom that means you're eating a lot.
A very old trough. A hard-wearing trough. A durable trough. One tough trough.
the trough the trough the trough
The pig ate from the trough. Trough is a noun.
The possessive form of the singular noun trough is trough's.