A palea is the interior chaff or husk of grasses.
There are several options: * My uncle always called them the casts. * Chaff. As in "Separate the wheat from the chaff."
BOTh are the SAME ! Type your answer here...
A paleola is a diminutive or secondary palea - the interior chaff or husk of various grasses.
Lucerne chaff is rich in protein and sugar and is best for horses who do strenuous activities. Oat chaff, on the other hand, has lesser nutritional value as it contains more roughage and bulk.
Another name for a grain husk is 'hull'.
Threshing: it is done by beating the sheaves against the wooden bars to separate the grains from the stalks. Winnowing: it is the process of removing the unwanted husk from the grains. It is done by pouring the grains from a height on a windy day when the grains fall on the ground and the chaff is blown away.
Chaff is the husk or material covering the seed. Hull, etc. Bits and pieces that are lighter than the seed and carried away by a sifting process. It means the same in the Bible. Most of the time, though, Bible writers were using it as an analogy. That is, they were making a comparison between someone's or some other nation's actions to chaff blowing away in the wind. In Bible times, chaff was separated from the grain by tossing the threshed heads into the air when there was a breeze, and allowing the wind to separate the chaff and grain. It's a practice still followed in the undeveloped and sometimes developing world.
The interior chaff or husk of grasses., One of the chaffy scales or bractlets growing on the receptacle of many compound flowers, as the Coreopsis, the sunflower, etc., A pendulous process of the skin on the throat of a bird, as in the turkey; a dewlap.
Chaff is a mass noun. It has no plural.
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"Chaff on the Wind" was created in May 2008 by the author Steve.