Gardening tool

This time we are looking on the crossword clue for: Gardening tool.
it’s A 14 letters crossword puzzle definition. See the possibilities below.

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Possible Answers: HOE, RAKE, SPADE, EDGER, WEEDER, DIBBLE, HEDGER.

Last seen on: –NY Times Crossword 25 Mar 24, Monday
USA Today Crossword – May 6 2023
Wall Street Journal Crossword – December 28 2022 – Squeeze Play
USA Today Crossword – Feb 12 2022
NY Times Crossword 21 Sep 21, Tuesday
LA Times Crossword 11 May 21, Tuesday
The Sun – Two Speed Crossword – Mar 3 2021
Newsday.com Crossword – Dec 21 2020
NY Times Crossword 4 Aug 20, Tuesday
NY Times Crossword 8 May 20, Friday
The Sun – Two Speed Crossword – Dec 20 2019
LA Times Crossword 28 Feb 19, Thursday

Random information on the term “HOE”:

Hoe (Korean pronunciation: [hwe̞]) refers to several varieties of raw food dishes in Korean cuisine. Saengseon hoe (생선회) or “Hwareo hoe” (활어회) is thinly sliced raw fish or other raw seafood (similar to Japanese sashimi). Yukhoe (육회) is made of raw beef seasoned with soy sauce, sesame oil, and rice wine, while gan hoe (간회) is raw beef liver with a sauce of sesame oil and salt.

Saengseon hoe is sometimes called sashimi (사시미), a Japanese loanword in use despite efforts to remove loanwords from the Korean language.

Fish hoe is usually dipped in a spicy gochujang-based sauce called chogochujang (초고추장) or Ssamjang (쌈장), and wrapped in lettuce and Korean perilla leaves.

When people finish a meal of saengseon hoe at a restaurant, they sometimes order maeuntang (spicy fish stew, from the fish heads and remaining meat) together with various vegetables.

Soups & stews

Banchan

Tteok

Historians assume the tradition of eating hoe was imported from China to Korea during early in the Three Kingdoms Period (57 BC-668 AD), facilitated by frequent exchanges between China and Korea on the Korean peninsula. According to the Confucian Analects, written in the 1st century BC, Confucius said “Do not shun rice that is well clean; do not shun kuai that is thinly sliced” (食不厭精,膾不厭細). While the term kuai (膾) originally referred to finely sliced raw fish or other meats such as beef or lamb, since the Qing and Han Dynasties it has referred mainly to raw fish.

HOE on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “RAKE”:

In telecommunication and radio communication, spread-spectrum techniques are methods by which a signal (e.g., an electrical, electromagnetic, or acoustic signal) generated with a particular bandwidth is deliberately spread in the frequency domain, resulting in a signal with a wider bandwidth. These techniques are used for a variety of reasons, including the establishment of secure communications, increasing resistance to natural interference, noise and jamming, to prevent detection, and to limit power flux density (e.g., in satellite down links).

This is a technique in which a telecommunication signal is transmitted on a bandwidth considerably larger than the frequency content of the original information. Frequency hopping is a basic modulation technique used in spread spectrum signal transmission.

Spread-spectrum telecommunications is a signal structuring technique that employs direct sequence, frequency hopping, or a hybrid of these, which can be used for multiple access and/or multiple functions. This technique decreases the potential interference to other receivers while achieving privacy. Spread spectrum generally makes use of a sequential noise-like signal structure to spread the normally narrowband information signal over a relatively wideband (radio) band of frequencies. The receiver correlates the received signals to retrieve the original information signal. Originally there were two motivations: either to resist enemy efforts to jam the communications (anti-jam, or AJ), or to hide the fact that communication was even taking place, sometimes called low probability of intercept (LPI).

RAKE on Wikipedia