hayfields in English

noun
1
a field where hay is being or is to be made.
Much of the land was intensely cultivated, a dry quiltwork of barley fields and hayfields and pastures shorn down to the dirt by goats and sheep.
noun

Use "hayfields" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hayfields" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hayfields", or refer to the context using the word "hayfields" in the English Dictionary.

1. Control In Pastures, Hayfields, and Barnyards

2. Fall Armyworms Fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda , is the most damaging insect pest of bermudagrass hayfields

3. Once common in hayfields throughout the Northeast, Bobolinks have been in decline since the 1900s

4. On then-meadows and hayfields there is birch coppice chirping joyfully. Flocks of thousand of migrating birds feed upon banks of fenny rivers.

5. Common, or lesser, Burdock (Arctium minus) is a weed in North American pastures and hayfields and can be grown as a vegetable

6. Bobolink Audubon Field Guide Fluttering over meadows and hayfields in summer, the male Bobolink delivers a bubbling, tinkling song which, loosely interpreted, gives the species its name

7. But left there are by now vast forests which engulfed all trails of human beings so fast. On then-meadows and hayfields there is birch coppice chirping joyfully.

8. Old Robert of Lincoln—better known as the Bobolink—used to be a common sight in meadows, hayfields, and pastures throughout much of the northern United States and southern Canada

9. But grassland birds like the Bobolink are disappearing in the northeastern US, and the decline is largely due to early summer mowing of hayfields during the weeks that birds like Bobolinks are actively nesting.

10. The Conquhar was a swift, clear-running river coursing over its bed of gneiss, well tucked-in on either side by green hayfields, where the grasshopper for ever "Burred," and the haymakers stopped with elbows on their rakes to watch the passer-by.