Foreign countries send Paris not only spices, fish, and various dainties, but also immense quantities of corn and meat.
That night huge bonfires consumed the fence-rails, kept our soldiers warm, and the teamsters and men, as well as the slaves, carried off an immense quantity of corn and provisions of all sorts.
Many of the infantry had nothing but parched corn and no tents, no rails to make a fire; rather tough but I suppose it is honest.
Went foraging in the morning; returned with fresh pork, beans, corn and fodder in plenty.
Shelled corn was got in plenty for horses from Secesh camp, but the boys many of them supped on corn and coffee.
Left the village behind us, and our road led through arable ground for a considerable way, on which were growing very good crops of corn and potatoes.
Fields ofcorn and feet of cities lo the mighty river laves, Where the Saxon sings his ditties o'er the swarthy warriors' graves.
If it had this effect, it would destroy entirely the trade both in corn and in iron, and both countries would lose the whole of the advantage which they previously gained by exchanging those commodities with one another.
Now, in the above illustration of corn and iron, how can we know whether or not x bushels of corn (the produce of 100 days’ labor in the United States) will exchange for exactly y tons of English iron?
Then come de cradlers of de wheat, de threshers, and de millers of de corn and de wheat, and de feeders of de cotton gin.
He returned to Lilybaeum, the third day after he set out, with a hundred and thirty transports laden with corn and booty.
Here a great quantity of corn and provisions of every kind had been laid up by the Romans.
As my land is divided almost equally each year between corn and oats, which follow each other, it gets a cover crop turned under every two years over the whole of it.
Last year I bought ten thousand bushels of corn andoats at a tremendously low price.
We must relate the growth of the school directly to the material prosperity of this land of corn and swine, to the marvelously fertile soil and to the era of expansion in which our history falls.
Before the days of grist mills coffee mills were used for the grinding of corn and wheat.
Footnote K: The pioneer settlements about Mount Vernon had sent several flat boats down the Cedar and Mississippi to New Orleans with cargoes of wheat, corn and potatoes.
Mounted on his pony, with a wallet of corn and a rifle on his back, Boone rode straight on westward thirty days without meeting a single human being.
Last Summer when we were absent, you bad-hearted Osages destroyed our fields of corn and cut up our gardens," cried the angry Shawnees, who always sided with the Delawares.
Then they opened their cellar-holes of corn and vegetables, hidden away as a last resource in protracted siege when the Sioux drove off the game and shut them up in their picketed villages.
Some of their villages were permanent, at any rate for a term of years, and near them they cultivated small crops of corn and melons.
Following them up, Christian reached the towns early in November,[76] and remained two weeks, sending out parties to burn the cabins and destroy the stores of corn and potatoes.
The writings of all the colleges, together with the archives of the country, were totally consumed, together with a prodigious magazine of corn and flour, valued at four millions of crowns.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "corn and" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.