stover in English

noun

leftover or useless parts of plants that remains after harvesting (i.e. corn stalks, etc. - used as animal feed)

Use "stover" in a sentence

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

1. Russell Stover 2 pack Bunnies Milk Chocolate.

2. Stover is a kind of potential feedstock of Biofuels, such as corn stover, barley straw, wheat straw, switch grass and rice straw.

3. 13 The stover is abundant and renewable resource and mainly consists of cellulose , hemicellulose and lignin.

4. Stover & Co offers a wide selection of Brill products at wholesale and bulk pricing

5. 11 The stover was abundant and renewable resource and mainly consisted of cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin.

6. The properties and application of plant fiber, corn stover, wheat straw, bagasse fiber and bark modified PU were introduced.

7. 300 corn stover bales, Baled with JD 568, net wrapped, will load, delivery is available! (605) 396-7500

8. These projects will demonstrate the thermochemical conversion process of turning grasses, stover, the non-edible portion of crops and other materials into biofuel.

9. Therefore, the techniques of replacing soybean cake with the urea protein concentrate and using corn stover treated by NaOH in TMR and pelleting of TMR were all practical.

10. Our results demonstrated that seaweed bioethanol has lower GWP in the long term than terrestrial Bioethanols from corn grain, corn stover, and switchgrass, primarily because seaweed cultivation does not consume fertilizers and incur carbon debt and N 2 O emission

11. “Bohemianism is not a trend, it’s a timeless movement, a way of life both fleeting and enduring that reappears every now and then as a backlash against our bourgeois, mass market, easy access culture.” Laren Stover, author of Bohemian Manifesto: A Field Guide to Living on the Edge