Pompions there be of several kinds; they are dryer than our English pompions and better tasted; You may eat them Green.
The Maiz is like course millet, and the pompions are better and more sauorie than those of Spaine.
Pompions are often planted at the angles with the corn, but only in every fifth or sixth row, and at some distance apart in the rows.
Pompions are pumpkins; shalots are a kind of small onion.
As horses with this disease can seldom eat corn, I tied mine up out of doors on a piece of timothy grass, and gave her as many pompions as {188} she would eat.
The cushaws and pompions they lay by, which will keep several months good after they are gathered; the peaches they save by drying them in the sun; they have likewise several sorts of the phaseoli.
Their pompions I need not describe, but must say they are much larger and finer than any I ever heard of in England.
The Indians dried the pompions on strings for winter use, as is still done in New England farm communities.
Pompions they called them in "the times wherein old Pompion was a saint.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pompions" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.