hop field


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  • noun

Synonyms for hop field

a garden where hops are grown

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
They jumped in a lorry that took them to the hop fields.
During Nedloh's operation, the bottom floor housed the facility's brewing and tasting area, while the top offered an expansive view of hop fields and rolling Finger Lakes countryside.<br /> "I applaud the efforts of Empire State Development in encouraging Other Hall Brewing to open in Ontario County," said Ontario County board of supervisors chair Jack Marren.
The mother of one child said she had gone to the hop fields herself since she was 12 years of age.
Landscapes and seascapes have always had a great influence on Tom's work, from the lattice structures of the Kent hop fields of his early life, to the seascapes and olive fields of Southern Italy.
"I grew up in Kent among the oast houses and hop fields and used to have a Saturday job as a pot-washer," says Tanner, between polite mouthfuls of chicken and avocado sandwich at the pub where we meet.
ON September 3 1939 I was 12, happily sitting in the back of an old lorry on the way from London to work in the hop fields of Kent.
THE Garden of England, famed for its hop fields and orchards, has seen a new crop of great places to stay in recent years.
over the hop fields of Kent in the Battle of Britain."
He often told the story of the train journey that day, starting off through the hop fields of Kent.
"The brewers in turn would buy old clothes and wool which they dug into hop fields to improve the quality of the beer."
In Oregon, 75 breweries are within 100 miles of hop fields. That allows craft beer makers to add the hops to the kettle within hours of harvest, preserving the natural flavor from the plant.
The story of most interest to readers of Labour/Le Travail might well be the fascinating and multi-layered account of seasonal migrant workers in the hop fields of western Washington.
Partial contents: "Beyond Laments and Eulogies: Reimaginings," by Eileen Boris; "Then There's the Nurse" (poem), by Cortney Davis; "The Wages of Patriarchy: Some Thoughts about the Continuing Relevance of Class and Gender," by Alice Kessler-Harris; "The Practice of Everyday Colonialism: Indigenous Women at Work in the Hop Fields and Tourist Industry of Puget Sound," by Paige Raibmon; "Politicizing the Laboring Body: Working Families, Death, and Burial in Winnipeg's Influenza Epidemic, 1918-1919," by Esyllt Jones; "'And I Feel Like I'm Dying from Mining for Gold': Disability, Gender, and the Mining Community, 1920-1950," by Nancy M.