silage
IPA: sɪɫɪdʒ
noun
- Fermented green forage fodder stored in an airtight silo or clamp.
verb
- To ensile.
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Examples of "silage" in Sentences
- Mycoestrogens can be found in silage.
- A bag silo for preparing silage is disclosed.
- It is also suited for silage, but not for hay.
- Cows eat grass but also are fed grain and silage.
- That is they are not as digestible as corn silage.
- Silage is a useful feedstock for anaerobic digestion.
- The silage is withdrawn from the shaft at the bottom.
- Concrete beneath the silage prevents liquor leaching out.
- The silage is then fermented to provide feed for livestock.
- The fodder which is the result of the process is called silage.
- Is "silage" a positive adjective when describing a beer's aroma?
- He had to remind Bess to call the silage man to finish cutting the cornfields.
- I wish the silage was a little more potent but it lasts fairly well although it stays close to the skin.
- Further work proved dry cows can graze kale without requiring any fibre supplement such as silage or straw.
- Some of the zones had previous exposure to the idea of silage through an extension effort made ten years earlier.
- The sweet smell of silage and manure remind him he's home, a dog howls across the valley and is answered with a bark.
- Molds must have air to grow, and therefore silage which is packed air-tight and fed out rapidly will not become moldy.
- Their configuration altered as she walked on, and other features disclosed themselves in the moving landscape: a church tower and a silage tower in the distance, a yellow combine harvester far off at a field's edge, a shed, a sewage outfall.
- The simple fact that villagers were so anxious to use the silage is a strong enough indication of the potential role the silage technique can plays Once again the importance of technical surveillance and contact is a key factor in getting the villagers to realize what can be achieved through their own efforts.
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