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44 Sentences With "farms out"

How to use farms out in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "farms out" and check conjugation/comparative form for "farms out". Mastering all the usages of "farms out" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Bullshit. There are tons of free programs that help farms out.
"Originally there were a lot of farms out there," Ms. Pascullo said.
There are some farms out there doing a great job with sustainability and cleanliness.
Recent policy has driven many small farms out however, exacerbating an earlier market rout.
Ms. Rivera rejected the notion that the ban would put the upstate farms out of business.
He already farms out many of the more tedious tasks, via the internet, to workers in other countries.
A three-year campaign to crack down on waste has already pushed many smallhold farms out of business.
When Facebook farms out items to independent outfits for fact-checking, the evidence that it moderates behaviour is mixed.
That price is so low that it is pushing many of New York's small family farms out of business.
Right now, Cover farms out these leads to other insurance companies and is collecting $190,000 per month in referrals fees.
Much of the work that Ms. Kamen farms out to her contractors today involves correcting bad transcriptions from automated services.
The farm has 280,2780 animals, including 22000 milkers when I visited—small compared to the 19963,21996 plus cow farms out west.
The company is also expected to cut another 2,000 positions as it sheds divisions and farms out work to cheaper contractors.
While not representative of the views of every Kwakwaka'wakw person, the people here today want the fish farms out of their waters.
The wind blows consistently stronger and more uniformly offshore, but it's expensive to build and maintain massive projects like wind farms out there.
Big agricultural companies such as Monsanto don't do themselves any favors by copyrighting certain strains, running small farms out of business, and being secretive.
It operates in 22.55 cities worldwide and, like Lime, farms out its recharging to anyone 21.03 or older with a smartphone and a willingness to do it.
Though the Hywind Scotland project appears to be one of the more promising floating wind farms out there, there's no shortage of them currently in the works.
He joined a Construction Army corps in the Gobi desert, trying to create farms out of salty clay in a "place that birds don't care to shit".
The state's public defender board does not employ its own capital defense teams but farms out the work to a handful of private law firms, nonprofits and individual attorneys.
It's a hard time to be a dairy farmer in America: The nationwide decline in milk consumption and the rippling effects of the trade war with China have pushed thousands of farms out of business.
Farm and trade policies encourage U.S. dairy farmers to produce as much as possible, leading to boom-and-bust cycles that drive small farms out of business and compel mid- and large-sized farms to keep getting bigger.
It is this technology (referred to variously as lab-grown meat, in vitro meat, animal-free meat, and clean meat), along with plant-based substitutes, that Jacy Reese's The End of Animal Farming argues will put livestock farms out of business, without necessarily meaning the end of meat.
But is that as good a use of your time and resources as, say, canvassing for or donating to a politician who will make actual strides in regulating big oil corporations, or investing in green energy, or forcing factory farms out of business and subsidizing sustainable small farms?
" Senator Kevin BradyKevin Patrick BradyRepublicans' rendezvous with reality — their plan is to cut Social Security The Social Security 2100 Act is critical for millennials and small business owners House panel releases documents of presidential tax return request before Trump MORE says it drives small firms and family farms "out of business.
Tyden bought this farm in 1936, and began making improvements. In 1941 he released all his employees after the harvest and leased the farms out to farmers to run as they saw fit. Tyden died in 1951. He still owned Farm No. 6, and it remained in the family until 1994.
The post office reopened and by the early 1960s, the population had risen to 600. Increasing fuel prices in the mid-1970s made irrigation unprofitable and forced many area cotton farms out of business. A decline in the number of inhabitants soon followed. By 1990, Coyanosa had around 270 people.
The economy is based on subsistence agriculture, cattle raising, services, public administration, and small transformation industries. There were 23 industrial units (2006), 124 retail units (2007), and 02 banking establishments (2007). In 2006 there were 549 farms. Out of the 37,000 hectares of total land 26,000 hectares was pasture land.
Farnan was purchased for $550,000 by Phoenix Thoroughbreds/Aquis Farms out of the Vinery Stud draft at the 2019 Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale. Farnan was bred by Phoenix and is the sixth foal of the talented Tallow, daughter of Street Cry, and winner of a Group III race The Vanity.
In the 1890s, Montana had 25 Civil War veterans living on county poor farms, out of a total of 2,500 veterans. In 1895, the Montana State legislature responded to lobbying by the Grand Army of the Republic (G.A.R.) and authorized the establishment of a soldiers' home. Columbia Falls was selected out of a group of eight communities.
The 3,000 attendees bid so intensely the record for a mare selling at auction was set and broken four times that day on Pretty Buck. Eternal Sun's dam Sierra Glitter set a record price for a Quarter Horse when the final bid for her was $14,200. Parke McAvoy of Rio Vista Farms out of Fresno, California, acquired Sierra Glitter that day.
In 1770 only Damgården had moved out of the village to be closer to its land. Most of the remaining farms and houses in the village were destroyed in a fire on 6 September 1798. The fire began in Teglgården's workshop when a pot of glue that boiled over ignited some shavings. It was decided to rebuild the farms out on their fields.
It is the location of the westernmost point surveyed as part of the Mason–Dixon line in 1767. In the early 19th century Perry Township was part of the Western frontier, and immigrant families carved farms out of the forested hills. In the late 19th century oil and gas was discovered here, bringing considerable prosperity to many of the township's residents.
He also participated as shortstop during the post-season farm championship match where Hanshin won (8-4), and he was awarded the game's MVP (1 RBI, 1 earned run, 1 stolen base). 2019 He spent the entire season playing in the farms. Out of 114 Western League game appearances, he finished with a batting average of 0.234, 43 RBIs including 2 home runs, and 17 stolen bases.
The son of John and Nina Milner, Jay was born on born October 30, 1926, near Muleshoe, Texas. He moved with his family around small towns based around cotton farms out in West Texas. They moved to Lubbock, Texas when Jay was in the second grade. Milner played football for his local high school team, there he would go on to be a part of the state champion football team at Lubbock High.
The Thomas Hawley house is a rare survivor from the earliest era of Stepney's settlement.Stepney Heritage Trail Guide retrieved on 2009-05-11 It is also a reminder that until the mid-20th century, most residents made their living by farming. Present day Stepney or Monroe, was originally the northern part of Stratford, which had been settled in 1639. In the early 18th century, descendants of Stratford's original settlers, Thomas Hawley among them, carved out farms out of the wilderness.
The early Colonist cleared the virgin forests and carved farms out the land—and these are the same working farms that you see today.Municipal Histories 974.873-R 12 at Huntingdon Co. Historical Society, PA 'In the early 1800s individuals of the area began mining Tussey Mountain for ore. These men operated on a small scale, but later larger companies started operations. One of these was the Grove Brothers of Danville, Montour Co., PA. They hauled ore to Cambria Iron Ore Works at Johnstown.
The convergence of Indian and mestizo culture was a process driven by the economic exploitation of resources. Chihuahua's first mine and first hacienda were established by thirty Spanish families in 1575, initiating mining and grazing as the future primary industries of the region. Sometimes Indians worked in mines and farms out of choice, but more often they were forced laborers or slaves. At first, wool clothing was a great attraction to volunteer laborers, but impressed labor and harsh treatment soon became unbearable.
The stone walls, probably meant to keep livestock from neighboring farms out in the early days, were augmented by work paid for by local benefactor Ferdinand Hopkins, who also had the gates and Crosby's monument added. The Gilead Cemetery Association was created at this time to maintain the cemetery and document its history. Burials dwindled after the opening of the much larger Raymond Hill Cemetery nearby. Those who chose Gilead as their final resting place were mainly the descendants of those already buried there.
In the 12th century, the forest still reached the town gates at Aschaffenburg. In the dales, in humble settlements, lived the Mainz Archbishop's serfs who busied themselves in forestry and lived by hunting and working small farms. Out of one such settlement grew the village of Glattbach over the course of the centuries (earlier known as Gladebach and also Gladbach). It might have got its name from the goldlike glittering in the local stone found on the banks and on the bed of the brook (glad meant “glittering”, and Bach is German for “brook”).
Stubbins has a long history; its name (see below) looks back to the Middle Ages when people were carving new farms out of the heavily wooded countryside. Like other communities in Rossendale, Stubbins grew in the Industrial Revolution. The change to an industrial village began towards the end of the 18th century when a calico printworks was built on the site now occupied by Georgia-Pacific. The 19th century owners of the printworks began to give the village its present shape by building rows of terraced houses for their workers.
The Tokanui Branch was largely served by mixed trains that carried both passengers and freight. Upon opening, the first section to Waimatua was served by just two mixed trains from Invercargill per week, but when the line was opened to Waimahaka, services changed to a daily mixed train that ran from the terminus to Invercargill and back. These trains were changed to run from Tokanui when it was reached by the line. Initially, timber was the major traffic carried on the branch, but as farming areas developed, the main traffic became agricultural lime and fertiliser in and produce of the farms out.
The fines were to serve as compensation for smoke damage to crops and included Cominco buying four complete farms (out of sixty farms involved) closest to the stacks. No government regulations of the smelter's output were imposed on Cominco following the 1924 decision. As a direct consequence of the local dispute and arbitration, Cominco looked for ways to reduce the smelter's smoke output while increasing the smelter's production. The initial solution involved increasing the height of the smokestacks to 409 feet in 1926 in an effort to disperse the smelter's smoke by pushing it higher into the atmosphere, but this local solution proved to be a problem for their Washington neighbours.
Arrington was able to circumvent A. William Lund's policy of personally approving all notes taken in the archives: Arrington took his notes on a typewriter using carbon copy paper, enabling him to leave a copy with Lund and take his own copy home. In order to rewrite his dissertation into Great Basin Kingdom, Arrington took a sabbatical 1956–1957 and was granted a fellowship at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California. In Great Basin Kingdom, Arrington traces the Mormon pioneer practices of "central planning, organized cooperation, and the partial socialization of investment implicit in Mormon theory" to the democratic theory of the Founding Fathers of the United States. Arrington also noted that pioneers found religious significance in creating farms out of previously wild land, making irrigation central to their way of life.

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