Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb Simple past tense and past participle of windrow.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • I crossed over the neck to the pond side of the elbow, hooked a left, and there we were, on a flat beach windrowed with seaweed blown ashore by the southwest winds of recent days.

    Vineyard Chill Philip R. Craig 2008

  • Each November we have this race on our urban streets, whether the city will manage to remove the windrowed leaves along the curb before the first snowfall.

    Gray morning jhetley 2008

  • I crossed over the neck to the pond side of the elbow, hooked a left, and there we were, on a flat beach windrowed with seaweed blown ashore by the southwest winds of recent days.

    Vineyard Chill Philip R. Craig 2008

  • I crossed over the neck to the pond side of the elbow, hooked a left, and there we were, on a flat beach windrowed with seaweed blown ashore by the southwest winds of recent days.

    Vineyard Chill Philip R. Craig 2008

  • I crossed over the neck to the pond side of the elbow, hooked a left, and there we were, on a flat beach windrowed with seaweed blown ashore by the southwest winds of recent days.

    Vineyard Chill Philip R. Craig 2008

  • Thus, then, the muffled rollings of a milky sea; the bleak rustlings of the festooned frosts of mountains; the desolate shiftings of the windrowed snows of prairies; all these, to

    Moby Dick; or the Whale 2002

  • With those burning, they windrowed the rest of the grass billets around the little fire to dry them out.

    Soul of the Fire Goodkind, Terry 1999

  • In the U.S.A. plants are cut and windrowed when most flower heads are still yellow, and left to dry.

    12: Seeds and germplasm 1996

  • The sky to-day is windrowed with flat-bottomed cumulus-clouds, tier beyond tier above a level plane of light, marking off the infinite distance like receding mile-stones on

    The Prairie Child Arthur Stringer 1912

  • They would have shuddered at the dust-windrowed street, the litter of refuse, the dismal lonesomeness, the forlornness, the utter isolation, the desolation.

    'Firebrand' Trevison Charles Alden Seltzer 1908

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