Sentence examples for grow bread from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

"grow bread" is not a grammatically correct phrase in English.
The verb "grow" is typically used to describe the process of plants or animals increasing in size, while "bread" is a type of food made from grains. It would not make sense to say "grow bread" as bread does not grow in the same way that plants do. Instead, you could use the phrase "grow wheat" to describe the process of cultivating the grains that are used to make bread. For example, "Farmers in this area grow wheat to make bread and other baked goods." Or, you could use the phrase "bake bread" to describe the process of making bread from wheat or other ingredients. For example, "Every morning, the bakery bakes fresh bread for their customers." In both of these examples, the verb used is more accurate and specific to the process being described.

Exact(1)

Children can walk the food chain on Manor Farm, seeing wheat grow, bread made at the on-site bakery and loaves sold in the farm shop.

Similar(55)

"Do they look like every other science experiment you've ever seen — exploding volcanoes, growing bread mold?

Immature embryos were isolated from field grown bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L). cv.

Here the point was not merely that we ought to be reclaiming the land to grow more bread or potatoes, but that the animals packed into its acres were belching out more methane than nature knows what to do with.

The whey concentrate goes into yogurt to help the bacteria grow, into bread as the magic ingredient to keep the product moist and into sausage as a binder (if you wonder what's going on here, recall that Borden used to make glue from milk).

The whey concentrate goes into yogurt to help the bacteria grow, into bread as the magic ingredient to keep it moist and into sausage as a binder (if you wonder what's going on here, recall that Borden used to make glue from milk).

You might learn the shocking results of an experiment by Ms. Creedon's third-grade class involving mold -- does it grow faster on plain bread, bread soaked in water, bread that's been dragged across the floor or bread that's been spit on?

"Penicillin is a mould that grows on bread, aspirin comes from willow trees, so it's not too surprising turning to nature to find useful drugs.

Penicillin grown on bread cannot be used to treat ANY illnesses or infection s.

Housemates will bake their own bread, grow vegetables and generally live as best they can with their new family.

But when you grow up breaking bread with Jeff Koons, and later working in his studio as an intern, it takes courage to aspire to be him.

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