adj
(archaic, law, of crops) Sown during the last years of a tenancy, but not ripe until after its expiration.
n
aged or weathered wood, especially from a dismantled barn
n
(obsolete) A church road (such as a path across fields) for funerals.
n
(Ireland, historical) A system of land tenure in which fields were reallotted when they went out of cultivation.
n
A piece of land that has been cleared.
n
(Ireland) An agricultural system of letting land in small patches or strips, usually for tillage.
n
An agricultural system used in Ireland, in which land is let for a season in small patches or strips, usually for tillage
n
(UK) An area of rolling hills (downs), often grassy pasture over chalk or limestone.
n
A field (or similar piece of land) that is equally fertile as another
n
(agriculture, uncountable) Ground ploughed and harrowed but left unseeded for one year.
n
One who favors the practice of fallowing land.
n
Land that is suitable for farming and agricultural production.
n
The region that produces the food for a particular population.
n
(surveying) A small piece of land left unincorporated due to competing surveys or a surveying error.
n
One who inserts scions on other stocks, or propagates fruit by engrafting.
n
Fallow ground which is planted with a different crop, e.g. a pease field planted with turnips.
n
A traditional street party or dance near the start of the school year, at around fall mid-terms
n
(agriculture) The ground left unploughed between furrows; any of several portions into which a field is divided for ploughing.
n
Agriculture dominated by large estates.
n
(obsolete) Land lying untilled; fallow ground.
n
(now rare, dialectal, historical) (Green) land as opposed to flood or desert; a pasture.
v
Alternative form of leasow [(transitive, archaic or dialectal) To feed or pasture]
n
Locally unwanted land use.
n
Obsolete form of moorland. [Open land that has an acidic peaty soil and is mostly covered with heather or bracken.]
n
Land suitable for use as a park.
v
(transitive) To move animals into a pasture.
n
land that has been or is meant to be ploughed
adj
Provided with prairie land.
n
(Scotland, chiefly in place names) An area of wasteland (or common land) now enclosed for farming.
n
(Britain and Europe) land that has been taken out of agricultural production to reduce crop surpluses
v
To participate in a financial arrangement in which a tenant farmer pays for use of land with a share (part) of the crop raised on that land.
n
A region of arable land divided into sections farmed by different people.
n
A subdivision of a plot of land, especially one used for an agricultural experiment.
v
To plough and work in summer, in order to prepare for wheat or other crop; to plough and let lie fallow.
n
(historical) A unit of land area, the amount that could be ploughed in one day.
v
Alternative form of thryfallow [(obsolete) To plough for the third time in summer.]
n
(obsolete) The process of twifallowing land.
n
(chiefly South Africa) The open grassland or pastureland of South Africa and neighbouring countries.
n
A field of wheat; a plot of land planted with wheat.
n
An area where wheat is produced.
n
(obsolete) Control over and responsibility for a wooded area.
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