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"parch" Definitions
  1. parch something (especially of hot weather) to make an area of land very dry

40 Sentences With "parch"

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

Warming climes parch the land and increase the odds that a fire will spread.
Find yourself adrift at sea, surrounded by undrinkable water, and you will parch to death.
It does the job without creating suds that strip away oil and parch my scalp.
Scarcity heightens differences: During a drought, the effect of cropmarks deepens until they become parch marks.
The sun continues to parch the desert, and the mines buzz with activity like never before.
America, Lara Trump is here to give you the lemonade that will parch your news-starved throats.
"This is one of the most Democratic wards in a very Democratic city," said Katie Parch, who also voted for the senator from Vermont.
Kanye fans can parch themselves at the cool water of #content this morning, as the rapper released more news on his long-awaited album SWISH.
We noticed that Will and Joel changed PBS/PELLA to BBS/BELLA; and fixed our unintentional dupe of DEAD SET ON at 13-Down and SET at 58-Across by changing PARTY to PARCH at 47-Down.
Tarteist Quick Dry Matte Lip Paint from Tarte is a new take on a product introduced a couple years ago; its 20 shades, with names like Bling and Wannabe, promise not to parch the lips despite being deeply saturated with color.
This year, however, the combination of exceptional visibility — the parch marks have been at their most prominent since the drought of 1976 — the proliferation of small drones that allow for amateur aerial photography and social media, which allows such images to spread, has meant that the phenomenon has captured the imagination of the general public like never before.
Parch Kuh (, also Romanized as Parch Kūh) is a village in Eshkevar-e Sofla Rural District, Rahimabad District, Rudsar County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 78, in 20 families.
It readily flycatches by sallying out from a parch to catch insects in flight.
Parch (, also Romanized as Pārch) is a village in Ashrestaq Rural District, Yaneh Sar District, Behshahr County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 196, in 45 families.
The text of the fragment was reconstructed by Kraeling and Welles. Dura Parchment 24 is currently housed at Yale University (P. Dura 24), New Haven catalogued there as Dura Parch. 10.
Pachk (; also known as Parch) is a village in Kakhk Rural District, Kakhk District, Gonabad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 275, in 99 families.
Aerial photography has revealed, within the fort, parch marks of the stone bases of about 28 tightly-packed hut circles, each some 7.5-8.2 metres across. It is officially protected as Scheduled Ancient Monument AN041.
Chin Parch (, also Romanized as Chīn Pārch; also known as Chīnī Pārch) is a village in Tuskacheshmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Galugah County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 27, in 5 families.
The word Bharbhunja is derived from the Gujarati words bhad which means an earthen oven, and bhunja which means to parch. Historically the Bharbhunja made a living by selling parched grain. The community originates from the Udaipur and Jodhpur regions of Rajasthan. They speak Gujarati, but most understand Hindi.
Milecastle 22 (Portgate) was a milecastle of the Roman Hadrian's Wall. Its remains exist as a low, turf covered platform just east of the Portgate roundabout (junction of the A68 and B6318). The platform is on the east side, reducing to only a parch mark on the west side.
The Havasupai parch and grind the seeds and use them to make mush and soup. They also dip the fresh plant in salt water and eat it with mush or cornmeal as a condiment.Weber, S. A. and P. D. Seaman. Havasupai Habitat: A. F. Whiting's Ethnography of a Traditional Indian Culture. Tucson.
Pakajik (, also Romanized as Pakājīk; also known as Bīā Jīk, Pagājek, Pagā Jīk, Parch, Pārchī, Payadzhik, Paya Jīk, Pega Jik, Pīkāchīk, and Yakāchīk) is a village in Gowharan Rural District, in the Central District of Khoy County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,216, in 298 families.
The windows are six-over-six units with wide wood moldings, narrow stone sills and prominent rectangular stone lintels. Above, the roof is low pitched with a simple wood cornice. The wing is of similar construction to the main section of the house. It includes a large wood parch extending across the front facade.
The site is now used for agriculture and employment purposes. The Cold War-era Bloodhound missile site, while derelict, is well preserved. Hardstandings for 32 Bloodhound missiles are present. During the summer of 2018 the parch marks of various World War II-era buildings became visible on the former technical site within the boundaries of the missile site.
Recently, two suggestions for the origin of the word have emerged. The first cites the Arabic `ajam ("foreigner, non-Arab"). The second references the Greek verb azainein ("to dry, parch"), which fits the identification of Azania with arid sub-Saharan Africa. ::Mzansi, an alternative endonym: a popular, widespread nickname among locals, used often in parlance but never officially adopted.
The Chaco experiences seasons that alternately flood and parch the land, yet seasonal variations in temperature are modest. Chaco temperatures are usually high, the averages dropping only slightly in winter. Even at night the air is stifling despite the usually present breezes. Rainfall is light, varying from per year, except in the higher land to the northwest where it is somewhat greater.
Cropmarks at a protohistoric site at Grézac, France Cropmarks or crop marks are a means through which sub-surface archaeological, natural and recent features may be visible from the air or a vantage point on higher ground or a temporary platform. Such marks, along with parch marks, soil marks and frost marks, can reveal buried archaeological sites not visible from the ground.
In contrast to the Paranaense region, the Chaco has a tropical wet-and-dry climate bordering on semi-arid. The Chaco experiences seasons that alternately flood and parch the land, yet seasonal variations in temperature are modest. Chaco temperatures are usually high, the temperature drops only slightly in winter. Even at night the air is stifling despite the usually present breezes.
Flocks move into a new feeding ground after a storm has stimulated new green growth. In the Sahara the spotted sandgrouse are particularly fond of a species of spurge and concentrate on this until the foliage begins to parch, after which the birds return to their normal diet of seeds. These are abundant on the desert floor, remaining in a dormant state until rain occurs.George, 1978. p.
Winter nights can be chilly and frost is by no means unknown but the days are pleasantly warm, sunny and dry. During the summer, the Sahara region of Algeria is the source of a scorching, sometimes dusty and southerly wind called the Sirocco. These winds parch the plateaus of northern Algeria up to 40 days and reach the Tell coastal region for as many as 20 days.The World Book Encyclopedia.
During the Tang dynasty (618–907) chao referred to roasting tea leaves. Stir frying became a popular method for cooking food only later, during the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). The Chinese character "炒" is attested in inscriptions on bronze vessels from the Eastern Zhou period (771–256 BC), but not in the sense of stir frying. Dry stirring was used in the Han dynasty (206 BC 221 AD) to parch grain.
She won a gold place for her story, The point of Irish coffee, and an editor's choice award for, Ramayan redux (Triangulation: Parch, US). She narrated two true-life tales at Tall Tales Storytelling. She completed an Advanced Fiction Seminar offered by University of Iowa's International Writing Program via distance learning, 2013. She was also invited to participate as a writer-in-residence in the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa in 2015, representing India.
Dry-season brood, male at Hodal in Faridabad district of Haryana, India The female is similar with the upper forewing having the orange patch on the black apical area narrower, posteriorly truncate and not extending so far down. There is also an outer transverse series of four black spots on the orange parch in interspaces 2 to 5. The underside is similar to that of the male but the markings are slightly larger. The antennae, head, thorax and abdomen are also similar.
The historian John Blair argued that the existence of a pre-Viking church "cannot be sustained from the parch-mark evidence". Taplow is not the only example where a church was built adjacent to an elite barrow burial, as other examples are known from High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire and Ogbourne St Andrew in Wiltshire. Blair raised the point that these churches may have been established in the tenth or early eleventh centuries "to Christianize tombs to which folk-legends attached, and which were identified with ancestors or local worthies".
These larger home-ranges reflect the larger body sizes and the lower diversity and abundance of prey. Martens will also adjust their behavior and home-ranges to suit the habitat needs since the average home- range of the marten is typically larger than the average defoliate parch size and therefore will need to adjust for defoliation disturbance. Newfoundland martens are also intrasexually territorial and show home-range fidelity. Home- range size have variation between years for both sexes based on the changes in the food abundance as well as the individual's ability to obtain their prey.
His literary works are: ‘Rhodd Mam i'w Phlentyn;’ he edited the monthly magazine called ‘Cyfaill Plentyn;’ ‘y Cyfamod Gweithredoedd,’ &c.;, 2nd edit., 1842; ‘Cofiant Parch. D. Stephenson, Brynmawr;’ ‘Ffordd Duw yn y Cyssegr a'r Mor;’ ‘Athrawiaeth a Dyledswydd,’ being two volumes of sermons, 1864 and 1866; he translated ‘Daioni a Thoster Duw,’ by John Owen, D.D., 1843; ‘Corff Duwinyddiaeth,’ by Dr. Brown of Haddington, 1845; ‘Cynydd y Cristion,’ by Dr. Goodwin, 1847; ‘Codiad a Chwymp Pabyddiaeth,’ by Dr. Fleming, 1849; ‘Crefydd Gymdeithasol,’ by Matthias Maurice, 1862; he also published ‘Ystafell Weddi, neu Allwedd Ddirgel y Nefoedd,’ by Brooks, translated by Rev.
Andy Greene of Rolling Stone dubbed Stranger to Stranger an "experimental album heavy on echo and rhythm that fuses electronic beats with African woodwind instruments, Peruvian drums, a gospel music quartet, horns and synthesizers." The album makes use of custom-made instruments, such as the Cloud-Chamber Bowls and the Chromelodeon, which were created by music theorist Harry Partch in the mid-twentieth century. Simon briefly moved the sessions to Montclair State University, where the instruments are stored, in 2013 in order to employ them on the album. "Parch said there were 43 tones to an octave and not 12," Simon remarked in Rolling Stone.
Cotterstock was recorded in the Domesday Book as Codestoche, the name probably deriving from Old English "corther-stoc" (dairy farm). In the summer of 1736 a Romano- British villa was discovered when tesserae from a large mosaic pavement were uncovered during ploughing. The villa was subsequently located a second time by aerial photography during the extremely dry summer of 1976, when parch marks of buried walls were recorded spread across three fields. A geophysical survey undertaken to accurately locate and amplify the aerial photographic information was carried out over a total of ten days in 1992 and 1993. A total of 19,140 soil resistance values were recorded at one-metre intervals within a grid composed of 20-metre squares.
But above all, it is a coming together of multiple factors: a very mild maritime climate, but one prone to gales and salt winds; waterlogged and boggy soils, but ones that often parch and dry out in the summer; soils of greatly contrasting fertility and pH; and lastly man's influence. Any single factor taken on its own would influence the flora; taken together, they combine, overlap and interact. Contrasting plant communities grow side-by-side in a mosaic that changes within a few metres but also changes markedly over time with the cycle of heath fires. It's not so much that conditions are ideal for growth, but that there is such a variety of different, difficult conditions.
They plant > abundance of Grain, reap three Crops in a Summer, and out of their Granary > supply all the adjacent parts. [They] build not their houses of Bark, but of > Watling and Plaister. In Summer, the heat of the weather makes them chuse to > lie abroad in the night under thin arbours of wilde Palm. Some houses they > have of Reed and Bark; they build them generally round: to each house > belongs a little hovel made like an oven, where they lay up their Corn and > Mast, and keep it dry. They parch their Nuts and Acorns over the fire, to > take away their rank Oyliness; which afterwards pressed, yeeld a milky > liquor, and the Acorns an Amber-colour’d Oyl.

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