Sprawling Old World annual cultivated especially in southern United States for food and forage and green manure.
Sinônimos
Examples for "cowpea"
Examples for "cowpea"
1Going southward, the cowpea has the advantage, and northward the clover gains.
2The genetic diversity indices indicated substantial diversity in Ethiopian cowpea landraces.
3Suppose the yield is two tons per acre of cowpea hay!
4Once cowpea seeds have enough moisture to take root, the plants can survive drought.
5Some farmers use the cowpea crop only as a soil-enricher.
1That's a black-eyed pea. He fired the object off his spoon slingshot style, and a seagull caught it in midair.
2COWPEA Cowpea, also known as black-eyed pea, is mainly grown by small farmers in more than 80 countries, from Nigeria to Brazil.
3Use already cooked, frozen, fresh, dried, or canned black-eyed peas here.
4Or skip the bun and instead enjoy 1 cup black-eyed peas.
5Black-Eyed Peas in Sauce, adds tomato puree, red pepper pods and ham hocks.
1The beneficial effects of Vigna unguiculata on metabolic disorders have been widely documented.
1You will remember that only one-tenth of the total nitrogen of the cowpea plant remains in the roots and stubble?
2Only about one-tenth of the nitrogen contained in the cowpea plant is left in the roots and stubble when the crop is harvested.
3Often intercropped with maize and cotton, cowpea plants provide shade and dense cover that help protect soil and preserve moisture.
4On the other hand, a stand of cowpea plants is surer in the case of soils that crust, and germination runs higher.
Translations for cowpea plant