Vegetable crops such as broccoli, asparagus, celery, lettuce, and cabbage are still harvested largely by hand.
It depends on how you are using the word in a sentence. For example, "The farmer hired workers to harvest the crops." In that sentence, the word harvest is used as a verb. It tells what the workers were doing to the crops. However, harvest can also be used as a noun, which could mean "the season for gathering crops".
Harvesting is the term used when crops are picked from a field.
Mesopotamians used sickles to harvest crops. These were curved or hooked tools with sharp edges that were used to cut plants close to the ground. After harvesting, they would typically thresh the crops to separate the edible grain from the inedible parts.
Rice harvester is a machine used to harvest rice crops. It is used by the farmers a lot.
Rice harvester is a machine used to harvest rice crops. It is used by the farmers a lot.
No, it is not a conjunction. The word harvest is a noun or verb related to agriculture: bringing in the crops you have grown. It can also be used metaphorically (harvesting organs).
Basically the tool would be used for someone to cut and harvest the crops when they are ripe.
The farmers harvested the corn. She harvested information for weeks and soon had a 10 page essay.
Slaves, or as the early settlers called them, black "indentured servants", were used to pick tobacco. Later on slaves were used for other crops, like cotton.
Irrigation.
Irrigation.
Irrigation.