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harvest (n.)

Old English hærfest "autumn," as one of the four seasons, "period between August and November," from Proto-Germanic *harbitas (source also of Old Saxon hervist, Old Frisian and Dutch herfst, German Herbst "autumn," Old Norse haust "harvest"), from PIE root *kerp- "to gather, pluck, harvest."

In Old English and Middle English primarily a season name, with only an implied reference to the gathering of crops. The borrowing of autumn and the use of fall (n.) in a seasonal sense gradually focused the meaning of harvest to "the time of gathering crops" (mid-13c.), also to the action itself and the product of the action (after c. 1300), which became its main senses after 14c. Figurative use by 1530s. As an adjective from late 14c. Harvest home (1570s) was a festive celebration of the bringing home the last of the harvest; harvest moon (1704) is that which is full within a fortnight of the autumnal equinox.

harvest (v.)

c. 1400, from harvest (n.). Of wild animals, by 1946; of cells, from 1946. Related: Harvested; harvesting.

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Definitions of harvest from WordNet
1
harvest (n.)
the yield from plants in a single growing season;
Synonyms: crop
harvest (n.)
the consequence of an effort or activity;
a harvest of love
they gathered a harvest of examples
harvest (n.)
the gathering of a ripened crop;
Synonyms: harvesting / harvest home
harvest (n.)
the season for gathering crops;
Synonyms: harvest time
2
harvest (v.)
gather, as of natural products;
harvest the grapes
Synonyms: reap / glean
harvest (v.)
remove from a culture or a living or dead body, as for the purposes of transplantation;
Should one harvest organs from dead people for transplants?
From wordnet.princeton.edu