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Definition of mangold in English: mangoldnoun ˈmaŋɡəʊldˈmæŋɡoʊld A beet of a variety with a large root, cultivated as stockfeed. Beta vulgaris subsp. crassa, family Chenopodiaceae Also called mangel, "mangel-wurzel" Example sentencesExamples - So we used to give them one feed of hay a day and one feed of straw and mangolds a day.
- She added that the measure was extended to other agricultural products such as husked rice, grain sorghum, soya beans, lucerne meal and pellets, mangolds, fodder roots, whether or not in pellet form.
- While different beet cultivars such as beet root, mangold and fodder beet have been used as vegetables or for animal feeding for a long time, sugar beet is a relatively young crop.
- Some of the aphid species that transmit viruses of sugar beet and mangold crops survive through the winter in clamps and multiply in the spring on the developing sprouts of mangolds.
- The scarcity of mangolds led to much experimentation with alternative aerial vegetation.
- Rows were well mucked and we grew potatoes, mangolds, turnips and cabbage.
- Not many children nowadays would know what a mangold is but then it was grown as fodder for cattle and it was often left to the farmer's children to bring out a cart full of turnips or mangolds to the sheep and cattle in the winter fields.
- The mangolds were fed to the cows and a corn or barley mix was kept on farm also for animal feed.
- They would also get a handful of crushed oats on top of the mangolds.
Origin Mid 19th century: from German Mangoldwurzel, from Mangold 'beet' + Wurzel 'root'. Definition of mangold in US English: mangoldnounˈmaNGɡōldˈmæŋɡoʊld another term for mangel Example sentencesExamples - While different beet cultivars such as beet root, mangold and fodder beet have been used as vegetables or for animal feeding for a long time, sugar beet is a relatively young crop.
- Some of the aphid species that transmit viruses of sugar beet and mangold crops survive through the winter in clamps and multiply in the spring on the developing sprouts of mangolds.
- The mangolds were fed to the cows and a corn or barley mix was kept on farm also for animal feed.
- So we used to give them one feed of hay a day and one feed of straw and mangolds a day.
- Rows were well mucked and we grew potatoes, mangolds, turnips and cabbage.
- Not many children nowadays would know what a mangold is but then it was grown as fodder for cattle and it was often left to the farmer's children to bring out a cart full of turnips or mangolds to the sheep and cattle in the winter fields.
- The scarcity of mangolds led to much experimentation with alternative aerial vegetation.
- They would also get a handful of crushed oats on top of the mangolds.
- She added that the measure was extended to other agricultural products such as husked rice, grain sorghum, soya beans, lucerne meal and pellets, mangolds, fodder roots, whether or not in pellet form.
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