View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Grain.

Grain

Grain meaning

The harvested seeds of various grass food crops eg: wheat, corn, barley. | Similar seeds from any food crop, e.g., buckwheat, amaranth, quinoa. | A single seed of grass food crops.

Grain vertaling naar Nederlands

Example sentences (20)

As a result, it is unlawful for Agland Grain, Inc., to receive grain for storage, grain bank, deferred pricing, warehouse receipts, or any other grain merchandising.

There are also products for those putting up new grain storage bins or new grain centers, including grain bin steps, catwalks and related items which help make up an efficient grain handling system.

Processing the raw grain takes three steps: steeping in water to add the right moisture level; germinating, where the grain actually sprouts; and kilning, during which the grain is essentially roasted and dried.

The Govt, yesterday, disclosed that it borrowed over 5,000 metric tonnes of grain from ECOWAS Stock (which was agreed to be paid back on grain for grain basis) to feed citizens.

Hiring trucks to carry grain past the lock is too expensive to justify the cost, so United Grain been filling railcars with a fraction of its grain to get it to Vancouver, the company said.

A Canadian grain company call South West Terminal, Ltd. ("SWT") had done four previous grain deals with Canadian farmers Bob and Chris Achter.

Due to the blockade, Ukraine has only been able to export grain from its port cities after it and Russia signed the Black Sea Grain Initiative, a United Nations–backed deal meant to stop a global wheat shortage.

KYIV, Ukraine — Russian troops hit port infrastructure in Ukraine’s Odesa region with Shahed drones overnight, the Ukrainian military reported, damaging a grain elevator and causing a fire at facilities that transport the country’s crucial grain exports.

Medvedev said Moscow would respond with a "reciprocal ban on imports from our country," including the termination of the Black Sea Grain deal that enables vital grain exports from Ukraine.

Mr. Putin also sought to defuse criticisms over Russia’s blockade on Ukrainian grain by offering to step up Russian food exports, including providing thousands of tons of free grain to six African countries.

Negotiated in July by Turkey and the United Nations, the agreement allows Ukraine -- one of the world's top grain producers -- to export grain through a safe corridor in the Black Sea.

Russia has continuously targeted port and grain storage facilities in Odesa since pulling out of a wartime deal allowing Ukrainian grain exports to countries facing the threat of hunger.

That evolution was occurring as some analysts detect mounting Chinese angst at the protracted nature of the war and Russia’s recent bombing of Ukrainian grain ports, upsetting previously protected shipments from the global grain powerhouse.

The European Union castigated Russia for its “cynicism” in pulling out of the Black Sea grain deal, saying the offer of a million tons of grain to African countries was a “parody of generosity”.

The grain deal had been brokered in July last year by and the UN, securing the safe passage of grain shipments from Ukrainian ports.

The TQ Samsun bulk carrier, the last grain ship to leave Ukraine under the Black Sea grain initiative, transits the Bosporus during the early morning hours on July 18, 2023 in Istanbul, Turkey.

They don’t want to chat about sports or the weather; they want to know the entire grain bill (the list of grain malts and adjuncts used in a beer recipe) and whether the brewer uses standard hops or extracts.

Under the terms of the Black Sea grain deal the Russians agreed not to target the port and grain shipping infrastructure of Ukraine, but well you know how well the Russians keep their promises.

A grain marketing workshop on Nov. 21 will assist growers in untangling analysts speak and the grain markets.

Estimates of grain and oilseed exports by Dragon Capital, a Kyiv-based investment firm, and figures on the number of grain ships arriving in Ukrainian ports collected by Lloyd’s List Intelligence, a shipping-data company, point to similar trends.