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And do not spread the compost on the weeds / To make them ranker.
2014 April 21, Mary Keen, “You can still teach an old gardener new tricks: Even the hardiest of us gardeners occasionally learn useful new techniques [print version: Gardening is always ready to teach even the hardiest of us a few new tricks, 19 April 2014]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Gardening), page G7:
[T]he very wet winter will have washed much of the goodness out of the soil. Homemade compost and the load of manure we get from a friendly farmer may not be enough to compensate for what has leached from the ground.
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From a substantivation and specialization of old Norman compost, from (Old Northern French), Old Frenchcomposte(“mixture of leaves, manure, etc., for fertilizing land; condiment”), from Latincompostus, syncopated variant of compositus(“composed, compound”), from componere. Modern French spelling influenced by English (compare the modern Norman spelling compôt, which is the expected form). Doublet of compote and composite.