| 释义 | 
		Definition of cowpea in English: cowpeanounˈkaʊpiːˈkaʊˌpi 1A plant of the pea family native to the Old World tropics, cultivated for its edible pods and seeds. 豇豆 Vigna unguiculata, family Leguminosae Example sentencesExamples -  Among the legumes that the researchers will be looking at are the cowpea and the Bambara groundnut.
 -  Ten hectares of cowpeas and seven hectares of millet were damaged by the flooding.
 -  The study documents public biotech research on 20 different crops, including maize, sweet potato, and cowpeas.
 -  Sorghum, millet, maize, cowpeas, and black-eyed peas are the main subsistence crops.
 -  A number of local varieties of crops, including sorghum, millet, groundnut and cowpea, have emerged.
 -  The district is largely dependent on agriculture with farmers growing crops like cowpeas and millet.
 -  We also grow groundnuts, lemongrass, cowpeas and other small scale crops.
 -  Phytochrome-mediated changes in GA production triggered stem elongation in cowpea.
 -  Rasochova detailed her work with cowpeas in developing vaccines against animal parvoviruses.
 -  They planted two legume cover crops - Lana vetch and Clay Iron cowpeas.
 -  Other crop plants like peppers, cowpeas, clovers, legumes, and many others will be studied in the future.
 -  Although widely prolific in the West Indies, they have not flourished in this country, and cowpeas have more or less supplanted them.
 -  The seed project was started last year to produce different varieties of quality cowpea seed.
 -  He encouraged farmers to try new crops, like peanuts, cowpeas and sweet potatoes.
 -  Two strains were studied, one with the infamous Bt gene and another with a gene from cowpea.
 -  Dehydrin loci and tolerance to chilling were markedly cosegregated in cowpeas.
 -  You can grow cowpea, amaranths and okra on your terraces with a little effort.
 -  It is drought tolerant, even more so than cowpeas, but benefits from adequate rainfall on well-drained soils.
 -  Originating in Africa, okra is thought to have been brought to America by slaves, along with that other Southern staple, cowpeas.
 -  The maloga bean, a native Australian cowpea, V. lanceolata, also has edible pods.
 
 - 1.1 The seed of the cowpea as food.
豇豆子 Example sentencesExamples -  Summer is the season of various kinds of beans full of protein including cowpeas, hyacinth beans and horse beans.
 -  Forest elephants spent a night stripping the field of what would have been a six-month supply of cowpeas.
 -  These are growing cowpeas, a crop, which they had abandoned before because of lack of an effective market.
 -  Other crops are sunhemp, cowpeas and pigeon peas.
 -  He's kept Miller's advice close, making memorable dishes like his cowpea fritters.
 -  Cowpeas are a staple crop eaten in Africa as a dry bean, snap bean, or raw salad green.
 -  Traditional rural staples are sweet potatoes, manioc, yams, corn, rice, pigeon peas, cowpeas, bread, and coffee.
 -  Other crops include peanuts, beans, squash, pumpkins, cucumbers, sweet potatoes, bananas, and cowpeas.
 
  
    Definition of cowpea in US English: cowpeanounˈkouˌpēˈkaʊˌpi 1A plant of the pea family native to the Old World tropics, cultivated for its edible pods and seeds. 豇豆 Vigna unguiculata, family Leguminosae Example sentencesExamples -  Other crop plants like peppers, cowpeas, clovers, legumes, and many others will be studied in the future.
 -  Originating in Africa, okra is thought to have been brought to America by slaves, along with that other Southern staple, cowpeas.
 -  It is drought tolerant, even more so than cowpeas, but benefits from adequate rainfall on well-drained soils.
 -  You can grow cowpea, amaranths and okra on your terraces with a little effort.
 -  Ten hectares of cowpeas and seven hectares of millet were damaged by the flooding.
 -  Rasochova detailed her work with cowpeas in developing vaccines against animal parvoviruses.
 -  A number of local varieties of crops, including sorghum, millet, groundnut and cowpea, have emerged.
 -  Phytochrome-mediated changes in GA production triggered stem elongation in cowpea.
 -  Among the legumes that the researchers will be looking at are the cowpea and the Bambara groundnut.
 -  Although widely prolific in the West Indies, they have not flourished in this country, and cowpeas have more or less supplanted them.
 -  They planted two legume cover crops - Lana vetch and Clay Iron cowpeas.
 -  He encouraged farmers to try new crops, like peanuts, cowpeas and sweet potatoes.
 -  The maloga bean, a native Australian cowpea, V. lanceolata, also has edible pods.
 -  The study documents public biotech research on 20 different crops, including maize, sweet potato, and cowpeas.
 -  Dehydrin loci and tolerance to chilling were markedly cosegregated in cowpeas.
 -  Sorghum, millet, maize, cowpeas, and black-eyed peas are the main subsistence crops.
 -  The district is largely dependent on agriculture with farmers growing crops like cowpeas and millet.
 -  Two strains were studied, one with the infamous Bt gene and another with a gene from cowpea.
 -  We also grow groundnuts, lemongrass, cowpeas and other small scale crops.
 -  The seed project was started last year to produce different varieties of quality cowpea seed.
 
 - 1.1 The seed of the cowpea as food.
豇豆子 Example sentencesExamples -  Traditional rural staples are sweet potatoes, manioc, yams, corn, rice, pigeon peas, cowpeas, bread, and coffee.
 -  Forest elephants spent a night stripping the field of what would have been a six-month supply of cowpeas.
 -  These are growing cowpeas, a crop, which they had abandoned before because of lack of an effective market.
 -  Cowpeas are a staple crop eaten in Africa as a dry bean, snap bean, or raw salad green.
 -  Other crops include peanuts, beans, squash, pumpkins, cucumbers, sweet potatoes, bananas, and cowpeas.
 -  Other crops are sunhemp, cowpeas and pigeon peas.
 -  Summer is the season of various kinds of beans full of protein including cowpeas, hyacinth beans and horse beans.
 -  He's kept Miller's advice close, making memorable dishes like his cowpea fritters.
 
  
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