Search for crossword answers and clues
Bring in — give up
Answer for the clue "Bring in — give up ", 5 letters:
yield
Alternative clues for the word yield
Word definitions for yield in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
In viticulture , the yield is a measure of the amount of grapes or wine that is produced per unit surface of vineyard , and is therefore a type of crop yield . Two different types of yield measures are commonly used, mass of grapes per vineyard surface, ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Yield \Yield\, v. i. To give up the contest; to submit; to surrender; to succumb. He saw the fainting Grecians yield. --Dryden. To comply with; to assent; as, I yielded to his request. To give way; to cease opposition; to be no longer a hindrance or an ...
Usage examples of yield.
But to extend the hypothesis so far as to suppose that species, aboriginally as distinct as carriers, tumblers, pouters, and fantails now are, should yield offspring perfectly fertile, inter se, seems to me rash in the extreme.
And this is the Absolute Ugly: an ugly thing is something that has not been entirely mastered by pattern, that is by Reason, the Matter not yielding at all points and in all respects to Ideal-Form.
For ourselves, while whatever in us belongs to the body of the All should be yielded to its action, we ought to make sure that we submit only within limits, realizing that the entire man is not thus bound to it: intelligent servitors yield a part of themselves to their masters but in part retain their personality, and are thus less absolutely at beck and call, as not being slaves, not utterly chattels.
But Napoleon could not accede to such proposals, for he was always ready to yield to illusion when the truth was not satisfactory to him.
From baryta, which it also resembles, it is distinguished by not yielding an insoluble chromate in an acetic acid solution, by the solubility of its chloride in alcohol, and by the fact that its sulphate is converted into carbonate on boiling with a solution formed of 3 parts of potassium carbonate and 1 of potassium sulphate.
Fifty eggs well fried will yield about five ounces of this oil, which is acrid, and so enduringly liquid that watch-makers use it for lubricating the axles and pivots of their most delicate wheels.
Its stem and leaves yield, when wounded, an acrid milky juice which is popularly applied for destroying warts, and corns.
LEED will not yield significant results unless the surface is scrupulously clean and free from adsorbed gas.
Dyne, his scrawny arms strapped to a pair of Y-shaped branches, eyes girlishly aflutter, feigned to yield his hairless body into the ecstatic admixture of bliss and pain of which he fancied heaven was justly composed.
Chemists have determined that the Agrimony possesses a particular volatile oil, and yields nearly five per cent.
I can run the whole sequence in one pot with about ninety-nine percent yield of the final amantadine derivative.
Not the least curious part of this outcrop is the black thread of iron silicate which, broken in places, subtends it to the east: some specimens have geodes yielding brown powder, and venal cavities lined with botryoidal quartz of amethystine tinge.
One of the strongest instances of an animal apparently performing an action for the sole good of another, with which I am acquainted, is that of aphides voluntarily yielding their sweet excretion to ants: that they do so voluntarily, the following facts show.
She knew the arborescent grasses that yielded the longest and toughest fibers and these she sought and carried to her tree with the spear shaft that was to be.
Church and for us all, not only the archbishopric but ten times as much, if it were possible, you should yield to him.