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grape
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026 har•vest /ˈhɑrvɪst/USA pronunciation
n. [ countable ]
Agriculture Also, ˈhar•vest•ing. the gathering of crops:helped with the harvest.
Agriculture the season when ripened crops are gathered.
Agriculture a crop or yield of one growing season:a harvest of wheat.
the result of any act, process, or event:the harvest of twenty years of research.
v. [ ~ + object]
Agriculture to gather (a crop or the like); reap:It was time to harvest the grain.
Agriculture to gather the crop from:to harvest the fields.
to accumulate; gather:harvested the results of their research.
to take for use:harvesting salmon from the river.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026 har•vest
(här′ vist),USA pronunciation n.
Agriculture Also, har′ vest•ing. the gathering of crops.
Agriculture the season when ripened crops are gathered.
Agriculture a crop or yield of one growing season.
a supply of anything gathered at maturity and stored:a harvest of wheat.
the result or consequence of any act, process, or event:The journey yielded a harvest of wonderful memories.
v.t.
Agriculture to gather (a crop or the like); reap.
Agriculture to gather the crop from:to harvest the fields.
to gain, win, acquire, or use (a prize, product, or result of any past act, process, plan, etc.).
to catch, take, or remove for use:Fishermen harvested hundreds of salmon from the river.
v.i.
to gather a crop; reap.
bef. 950; Middle English; Old English hærfest ; cognate with German Herbst autumn; akin to harrow 1
har′ vest•a•ble , adj.
har′vest•a•bil′ i•ty , n.
har′ vest•less , adj.
3.See corresponding entry in Unabridged See crop. 5.See corresponding entry in Unabridged accumulation, collection, product, return, proceeds.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
harvest / ˈhɑːvɪst / the gathering of a ripened crop the crop itself or the yield from it in a single growing season the season for gathering crops the product of an effort, action, etc : a harvest of love to gather or reap (a ripened crop) from (the place where it has been growing) (transitive ) to receive or reap (benefits, consequences, etc) to gather (a resource) for future use : harvesting people's data without their consent Etymology: Old English hærfest; related to Old Norse harfr harrow, Old High German herbist autumn, Latin carpere to pluck, Greek karpos fruit, Sanskrit krpāna shears ˈharvesting
'grape harvest ' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):