This is a good cider apple, and produces liquor of great excellence when mixed with other varieties.
The tree, when full grown, is from fifteen to twenty feet high, and produces an abundance of its beautiful fruit.
The tree is a very strong and vigorous grower, so much so, that in its young state, it is not a great bearer; but when grafted on the paradise stock, it produces abundantly.
The tree produces numerous straight, luxuriant, upward shoots, like a pollard willow; it runs much to wood, and in deep soils attains a considerable size before it becomes fruitful.
The tree is a free and upright grower, perfectly hardy, an early and abundant bearer; even in the nursery quarters it produces freely when only two years from the graft.
This is a most excellent cider apple; the liquor it produces being remarkable for its strength, richness, and high flavor.
The cider that it produces is strong bodied, rich, and highly flavored.
Obviously, the common consciousness which produces mythology cannot pronounce the myths, when it produces them, and accepts them, absurd.
The imagination which producesthem is, in a sense, a 'scientific imagination.
All experimental evidence is against the opinion that mere disuse in and of itself produces gain.
This tendency is so broad and so complex, the machinery governing it is so delicate, that it produces responses that vary tremendously with subtle changes in the individual, and with slight modifications of the situation.
But too intense a glare producesblindness and dizziness.
But the application of an irritant strong enough to produce a morbid depression at all, produces it from the first.
Its leading principle, as we have seen, is that like produces like, or, in other words, that an effect resembles its cause.
This last rule is an instance of the things which the hunter abstains from doing lest, on the principle that like produces like, they should spoil his luck.
A mistaken association of similar ideas produces homoeopathic or imitative magic: a mistaken association of contiguous ideas produces contagious magic.
It is believed that such a person's life is bound up with that of the animal to such an extent that, whatever affects the one produces a corresponding impression upon the other, and that if one dies the other must speedily do so too.
The acid produces ulceration if brought into contact with the skin, and its fumes are excessively harmful if inhaled.
This water should soon fill the stem completely, forming a continuous column of liquid which, by its hydrostatic pressure, produces a gentle suction, thus materially promoting the rapidity of filtration.
The reagent used is potassium ferricyanide, which produces a blue precipitate (or color) with ferrous compounds as long as there are unoxidized ferrous ions in the titrated solution.
Nevertheless, such a cup comb is heterozygous and produces both single-combed and Polish-combed germ-cells.
Booting is controlled by a dominant inhibiting factor that varies greatly in potency, and nostril-height is controlled by an inhibiting factor that stops the over-growth of the nasal flap which produces the narrow nostril.
Eventually (especially among animals) these cells become arranged into a membrane whose unequal growth in limited areasproduces foldings.
This is additional evidence that the Silkies are DR, and so this cross produces 50 per cent of pure extracted dominants in addition to 50 per cent of heterozygotes in booting.
FLESH RED The sulphate of iron, put in a small crucible, and lightly calcined, produces a suitable red oxide.
The misery in which the cotton spinners and weavers of the upper Rhine live," he writes, "is so profound that it produces the saddest results.
In the notes also this view exercises a weakening influence, and, combined with some other similar features, produces a sense of indistinctness.
You will find the evening and the morning established before the formation of this same sun, whose presence alone produces day, whose absence produces night, and whose different aspects constitute morning and evening.
To decide the question, it is sufficient to look around us, and to consider the effects that religion produces on minds really penetrated with its pre* tended truths.
In the philosophy of external matter, the greater or less familiarity of events produces an illusion exactly similar.
The mind, therefore, it is evident, can produce motion in matter; and it is hence some interposed spiritual agent, whichproduces all the phenomena of gravitation.
But, if we rush within, to force an avowal, of the secret energy thatproduces them, the enchanter and the enchantments alike are fled.
Very different are the sentiments which the science of mind produces and cherishes.
They are especially indicative of the impulsive, impressionable temperament--a mixture of the sanguine and the bilious--which produces the poetic and artistic natures.
Rising at birth it produces a well-made body, with long limbs, an oval and beautiful face, sanguine complexion, straight flaxen hair and grey eyes.
It produces a person of short stature and fleshy body, with a rather stooping gait.
Venus produces death by cancer, scurvy, dysentery, or wasting away and putrid diseases.
It produces a person of slender stature, with a long neck, narrow chest and dark hair.
They are too cheap when the man who produces them upon the farm or the man or woman who produces them in the factory does not get out of them living wages with a margin for old age and for a dowry for the incidents that are to follow.
I believe it is true to-day that we have many things in this country that are too cheap, because whenever it is proved that the man or woman whoproduces any article cannot get a decent living out of it, then it is too cheap.
I pity that man who wants a coat so cheap that the man or woman who produces the cloth or shapes it into a garment shall starve in the process.
When every farmer is able to sell from his own wagon everything he produces and is emancipated from transportation tolls, he is independent and prosperous.
Every great manufacturing establishment that is built there produces and increases population, and makes additional and nearer market for the products of your fields.
If there is any fact well established by satisfactory experience, it is that thorough and judicious draining will entirely remove the local source of the miasm which produces these diseases.
The evaporation of the surplus moisture lowers the temperature, produces chills, and creates or aggravates the sudden and injurious changes or fluctuations by which health is injured.
But if the person who produces it is defamed, this must be defended, if at all, upon some other ground than that it is criticism.
He watches her like a lynx, surprises her at all hours and places, and therebyproduces the suspicion which he is endeavoring to avert.
And Swedish, which is the most sonorous of all Germanic tongues, and full of Gothic strength, produces the most delectable effects in the long, rolling line of slow-marching dactyls and spondees.
I know of no English novelist since Smollett, who produces so deep a sense of reality in his descriptions of maritime life.
In this Species of the Disease, we must have Recourse to the general Method of treating inflammatory Disorders, and direct Bleeding, which often produces immediate Ease, if performed early.
This produces excruciating Pains of the Head, frequently accompanied with quick and violent Shootings, and with Pain in the Eyes; notwithstanding this Degree of the Malady is seldom dangerous.
Bad Water, like bad Air, is one of the most general Causes of Diseases; that whichproduces the greater Number of them, the most grieveous ones; and often introduces such as are epidemical.
It is the Effect of a rheumatic Humour thrown upon these Parts, in which, as it producesvery sharp Pains resembling that which is called a Stitch, it has from this Circumstance, been termed a Pleurisy.
A Cold constantly produces some Disorder or Defect in the Functions of some Part or Parts of the Body, and thus becomes the Cause of a Disease.
There are two Methods of preventing these Evils: one is, to avoid the Cause whichproduces them; but this is frequently impossible.
This same Cause producesvery often in the Country some most dangerous Phrenzies, which are called there hot or burning Fevers.
Interval of one Hour between each: This Medicine producessome bilious Stools, which greatly abate the Fever, and considerably lessen the Violence of all the other Symptoms of the Disease.
Yet it occurs too often, that this Venom not having been entirely expelled (or its internal Effects not having been thoroughly effaced) it is repelled upon the Lungs, where it produces a slight Inflammation.
No doubt, like all conviction of sin, it often produces unpleasant results.
So it goes throughout civilization: there is not an industry but produces its own special knowledge relating to unclassified details of adjustment.
Under these conditions, the cell produces a rattling noise and a luminous glow appears round the tip of the platinum wire.
It produces a wave in it, and it can be shown that all the parts of the above described siren apparatus have their electrical equivalents in the transmitter employed in Hertzian wave wireless telegraphy.
The demagnetisation of the iron which ensues produces an electromotive force in the secondary coil and causes a deflection of the galvanometer, and this deflection will continue and remain steady if the oscillation persists.
Here a courtly Chinese, skilled in the lubrication of a customer, produces the rich heavy silks for which his country is renowned, the velvets or the satins you desire, and shaves you skilfully.
The constant use of spirits produces this insensibility to their influence.
This alteration, be it ever so slight, produces a kind of lustre on the card, which the eye of the Greek can immediately detect.
The continued use of pork so fed not unfrequently produces a skin disease called sarnas, something resembling itch.
At Santa Mesa, in the neighbourhood of Manilla, the rope is spun up by the aid of steam and good machinery, established there for the purpose, and still carried on by an old shipmaster, who produces by far the best rope of all that is made.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "produces" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.