Digging, also referred to as excavation, is the process of using some implement such as claws, hands, manual tools or heavy equipment, to remove material...
17 KB (1,880 words) - 00:24, 15 October 2024
Privy digging is the process of locating and investigating the contents of defunct outhouse vaults. The purpose of privy digging is the salvage of antique...
24 KB (3,249 words) - 17:52, 13 June 2024
"Digging..." is a popular Indian poem by the internationally acclaimed Indian English poet Gopi Krishnan Kottoor. The poem won Second Prize in the Seventh...
3 KB (355 words) - 16:47, 23 July 2024
Clam digging is a North American term for a common way to harvest clams (edible infaunal bivalve mollusks) from below the surface of the tidal sand flats...
6 KB (619 words) - 20:07, 30 January 2024
Double digging is a gardening technique used to increase soil drainage and aeration. It involves the loosening of two layers of soil, and the addition...
2 KB (251 words) - 02:50, 11 February 2024
A digging stick, sometimes called a yam stick, is a wooden implement used primarily by subsistence-based cultures to dig out underground food such as...
9 KB (1,081 words) - 12:08, 7 October 2024
Maroon 5 (redirect from We Like Digging? (album))
were in high school. After self-releasing their independent album We Like Digging?, the band signed to Reprise Records and released the album The Fourth...
160 KB (13,807 words) - 08:23, 17 November 2024
Fossorial (redirect from Digging behaviour)
fossorial animal (from Latin fossorĀ 'digger') is one that is adapted to digging and which lives primarily (but not solely) underground. Examples of fossorial...
13 KB (1,569 words) - 19:09, 26 April 2024
Gold digging may refer to: Gold digger, a person, usually female, who enters a relationship purely for monetary gain Gold mining, the process of mining...
221 bytes (62 words) - 18:33, 5 September 2019
up digging in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Digging is the act of removing solid material from a surface. Digging may also refer to: "Digging", a...
448 bytes (97 words) - 21:31, 31 January 2019