• The land will also be used to make hay and silage in the summer.

    BBC: Belted Galloway

  • Successful thoroughbreds typically race for just a few seasons, but many retired champions go on to make hay as studs.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Your attempt to make hay out of his humorous statements rings completely hollow, especially to anyone who is really familiar with his personality.

    FORBES: Connect

  • By trying to make hay from the current tablet frenzy, Amazon has strayed from its customer-centric roots towards a more conventional product-centric mindset.

    FORBES: Sifting Through the Ashes: The Kindle Fire and Customer Centricity

  • Typical agreements only apply for three years, at which point the vendor is free to make hay with your idea, if you haven't managed to secure a patent by then.

    FORBES: Protect Your Prototype

  • The Republicans are determined to make hay out of the Democrats' perceived intransigence on drilling, while the Democrats are keen to paint the Republicans as the lackeys of greedy oil barons.

    ECONOMIST: Finding more oil has become the first issue of the campaign

  • And if one were to make hay over the virtues or deficits of nineteenth-century British poetry or twentieth-century Irish poetry, then one should encounter the full range of Tennyson's or Yeats's work before jumping, or slouching, to conclusions.

    NPR: Author Comes to Hip-Hop Music's Defense

  • You can expect Ed Balls to make much hay with this tomorrow, along with the higher borrowing numbers, and the falling forecasts for growth.

    BBC: Osborne, Balls and the OECD: Where they agree

  • So obviously in a case like this, sometimes folks try to make political hay out of it, and that's the way the system works and the process works.

    WHITEHOUSE: Press Briefing

  • Congressional leaders were quick to try and make political hay out of passage of the bill.

    FORBES: The Great Currency Debate

  • It suggests that Messrs Shleifer and Hay worked with Mrs Shleifer and the now Mrs Hay to make investments in Russia that were prohibited under the terms of the contract.

    ECONOMIST: A tale of two economists

  • The controversy of Jeremiah Wright, Mr Obama's former pastor who had made wildly paranoid and angry anti-American comments from his pulpit, was raised yet again. (Mrs Clinton sought to make a bit more hay.) Mrs Clinton's daft statements that she had braved sniper-fire to visit Bosnia in 1996 (video had shown her calmly walking off her plane) were chewed over once more.

    ECONOMIST: A bizarre debate in Pennsylvania

  • Democrats could make more hay by turning to Enron's implications for pensions.

    ECONOMIST: Party politics

  • To make it, fresh milk from grass or hay-fed cows within a 20km radius is poured raw into a copper pot and heated until it begins to curdle.

    BBC: Tracing fondue��s mysterious origins

  • Once you've got a taste for stylish home accessories, make your way to Normann Copenhagen (Strandboulevarden 98) or Hay Cph (Pilestraede 29-31) for a masterclass in simplicity and elegance.

    CNN: Copenhagen: Where to shop

  • So the prime minister has some explaining to do, and the opposition Democratic Party of Japan, seeking to bring down the coalition led by his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), will make all the hay it can.

    ECONOMIST: Japan��s history wars erupt again

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