Vegetable Gardening Juvenile Literature : Grow it, eat it / Royal Horticultural Society ; senior editor Deborah Lock.; Royal Horticultural Society (Great Britain)
Vegetable Oils : Vegetable oils in food technology / edited by Frank D. Gunstone.
2002
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Vegetable Trade Great Britain History : From orchard to market : an account of the development of the fruit and vegetable trade in the UK.; Davies, Peter N.
2005?
1
Vegetable Trade India : Marketing of fruits and vegetables in the cities of Calcutta, Delhi, Madras, Ahmedabad, Poona and Nagpur.; India.
Vegetarianism Early Works To 1800 : The English hermite, or, Wonder of this age. : Being a relation of the life of Roger Crab, living neer Uxbridg, taken from his own mouth, shewing his strange reserved and unparallel'd kind of life, who counteth it a sin against his body and soule to eate any sort of flesh, fish, or living creature, or to drinke any wine, ale, or beere. He can live with three farthings a week. His constant food is roots and hearbs, as cabbage, turneps, carrets, dock-leaves, and grasse; also bread and bran, without butter or cheese: his cloathing is sack-cloath. He left the Army, and kept a shop at Chesham, and hath now left off that, and sold a considerable estate to give to the poore, shewing his reasons from the Scripture, Mark. 10. 21. Jer. 35.; Crab, Roger,
Vegetarianism Religious Aspects Christianity : The absurdity & falsness of Thomas Trion's doctrine manifested : in forbidding to eat flesh, contrary to the command of God, the example of angels, Christ Jesus, and the holy apostles : and proved to be doctrine of devils, by the testimony of Holy Scriptures ...; Field, John,
Vegetarians England Early Works To 1800 : The English hermite, or, Wonder of this age. : Being a relation of the life of Roger Crab, living neer Uxbridg, taken from his own mouth, shewing his strange reserved and unparallel'd kind of life, who counteth it a sin against his body and soule to eate any sort of flesh, fish, or living creature, or to drinke any wine, ale, or beere. He can live with three farthings a week. His constant food is roots and hearbs, as cabbage, turneps, carrets, dock-leaves, and grasse; also bread and bran, without butter or cheese: his cloathing is sack-cloath. He left the Army, and kept a shop at Chesham, and hath now left off that, and sold a considerable estate to give to the poore, shewing his reasons from the Scripture, Mark. 10. 21. Jer. 35.; Crab, Roger,
Vegetation Mapping : Vegetation mapping : from patch to planet / published on behalf of the Biogeography Research Group of the Royal Geographical Society with the Institute of British Geographers by Roy Alexander and Andrew C. Millington.