Bushel - Wikipedia The bushel is an intermediate value between the pound and ton or tun that was introduced to England following the Norman Conquest Norman statutes made the London bushel part of the legal measure of English wine, ale, and grains
Bushel: Software for Agriculture Bushel brings farmers and agribusinesses into flow—less friction, fewer handoffs, clearer next steps
Bushel | Weight, Volume, Imperial System | Britannica Bushel, unit of capacity in the British Imperial and the United States Customary systems of measurement In the British system the units of liquid and dry capacity are the same, and since 1824 a bushel has been defined as 8 imperial gallons, or 2,219 36 cubic inches (36,375 31 cubic cm)
Bushel - definition of bushel by The Free Dictionary One would then conclude that the volume of a bushel is about one cubic foot However, a bushel is really a dry measure and contains 2150 42 cubic inches (1 24 cubic feet)
Convert Volume, Bushel A bushel is a unit of dry volume, usually subdivided into eight local gallons in the systems of Imperial units and U S customary units It is used for volumes of dry commodities, not liquids, most often in agriculture
Bushel Explained A bushel is an imperial and US customary unit of volume, based upon an earlier measure of dry capacity
bushel - Sizes There is a Winchester bushel, a customary bushel equal to three of these, a bushel of two bushels for the sale of potatoes near Appleby, and one of two and a half for that of barley