Encara no tenim significats per a "hoe corn".
1He would rather hoe corn all day than work in it.
2One day the Indians gave him a hoe and told him to hoe corn.
3She home, in my wigwam-takecare of pappoose, hoe corn, and keep ground good.
4Women who hoe corn, dig in a garden, and wash clothes, earn the wholesome bread of life.
5He found that really she was incapacitated for doing anything; but she said; "I can hoe corn like a nigger."
6Those who cannot hold a plow and hoe corn, should jolt themselves on the back of a horse at a good round trot.
7Colonel James Smith, who had been adopted by the Indians, relates (45) how one day he helped the squaws to hoe corn.
8The farmer, who was hoeing corn, heard the barking of his dog.
9On a warm, sunny day, the workmen were hoeing corn in an adjoining field.
10I have been hoeing corn to-day till my back aches ready to fall apart.
11Hoe corn when you may, say I.
12Riding down to the river and back will be a good bit easier than hoeing corn all day.
13They approved of it, but the old men afterward chid him for degrading himself by hoeing corn like a squaw.
14"I can milk cows, hoe corn and potatoes, ride horse to plough, and-
15And when Tillie and the children came in from hoeing corn at dinner time Spotty still lay snoozing in the sun.
16I was hoeing corn that day in a by-place three miles from town, and thought it certainly was the day of judgment.
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