Bushel in a sentence as a noun

I mean, even now, you can get a bushel of soy for $17.

You give Bob a bushel of apples, Bob gives you a bar of gold.

Why not use metric volumes instead of bushel?

Or that a bushel of wheat will give me some amount of energy when eaten?

And this is why people will forget about this unless MS spends a bushel trying to keep it in view.

This means they need twice as many acres of land per bushel, twice as much fuel per acre, et cetera.

I realize I'm in the minority, but I take all blog titles with a bushel of rock salt.

Now you go take this bar of gold to Alice and try to trade it to Alice for a bushel of oranges.

Now, the bushel is a unit of volume, whereas much of the world prefer to measure their crops by weight.

The government paid him well for every bushel of alfalfa he did not grow.

Bushel in a sentence as a verb

Just one bushel per acre difference means tens of thousands of dollars for the average farm.

It gets even more fun in agriculture, where the bushel is a frequently used unit.

My point was that you must assume some kind of risk -- many times a bushel barrel of risk -- when you are poor and just getting started.

You'd have the same conversion issues converting bushel to imperial weights.

But if a bushel of wheat doubles or triples in price overnight because it's priced in some weird volatile currency, people will starve.

>"The roughly 17-pound Macintosh comes in a square bushel-basket-size canvas tote bag with an oversized zipper.

There are bad apples in every community, and it certainly sounds like the author met some, but it's important to realize that a few bad apples don't ruin the whole bushel.

There was simply no need for so much farm labor after it turned out that unlimited and leveraged stock-market investment wouldn't make returns on every last penny and bushel.

There's a reason companies are employing "quitting" incentives, and that's for the very reason that happy employees are productive employees and the notion of one bad apple spoils the bushel.

Bushel definitions

noun

a United States dry measure equal to 4 pecks or 2152.42 cubic inches

noun

a British imperial capacity measure (liquid or dry) equal to 4 pecks

verb

restore by replacing a part or putting together what is torn or broken; "She repaired her TV set"; "Repair my shoes please"

See also: repair mend doctor restore