Concept cluster: Social systems > Farm or farming property
n
Alternative form of acre-dale [Land in a common field, different parts of which are held by different proprietors.]
n
(US, law) A statutory lien that protects the seller of farming equipment by giving the seller a lien on crops grown with the equipment.
n
(especially) Such a farm in Italy.
n
(Britain) A plot of land rented from the council for growing fruit and vegetables.
n
Alternative form of baby farm [(informal) An institution that is paid to care for unwanted children, often doubling as an orphanage or home for unwed mothers.]
n
Alternative spelling of bee farm [A farm of bees.]
n
A style of architecture in New England, consisting of a farmhouse and related buildings connected in a rambling fashion.
n
(archaic) In the early settlements of New York State, USA, a farm or estate.
n
(geography, archaic) Open countryside, or an area of open countryside.
n
(Barbados) A small moveable wooden house occupied by working-class people.
n
(Internet) An owner or operator of a click farm.
n
(US) A small business that produces homemade foods and is partially exempt from the regulations governing larger commercial food operations.
n
(US, historical) A general store in a rural setting, often associated with the time of cowboys
n
A form of land tenure and small-scale food production, unique to the Highlands and islands of Scotland, in which individual crofts are established on the better land while a large area of poor-quality hill ground is shared by all the crofters of the township for grazing.
n
(US regional, Cape Colony, New York, South Africa) A small inherited house-and-garden lot in a village or settlement.
n
A large rural estate in Latin America; a kind of ranch.
n
(chiefly Scotland, now rare) The position or state of being a factor.
n
(historical) An English unit of land area variously understood as the fourth part of an oxgang or of a yardland.
n
A tract of land held on lease for the purpose of cultivation.
n
(informal) An animal stereotypically found on a farm; livestock.
n
(sports) Synonym of farm team
n
Alternative form of farmland [Land that is suitable for farming and agricultural production.]
n
(rare) Synonym of farmer's market
n
A shop selling produce directly from a farm
n
Alternative form of farmstall [(South Africa) A shop attached to a farm and selling its produce.]
n
(US, euphemistic) The place an animal (or by extension, person, concept, etc) notionally goes when they are dead, used as a euphemism for a state of literal or figurative death or oblivion.
n
Someone with whom one lives or works on a farm.
adj
(said of food) Having certification in a voluntary program to track farm products from source to point of processing or consumption.
n
(neologism) An aesthetic and fashion movement inspired by rural farm living.
n
(mining) A legal entity that contracts part of a mining or oil lease from a farmor in exchange for services.
n
(obsolete) farming
n
Skill in farming.
n
The buildings and yards necessary for the business of a farm; a homestead.
n
(US, informal) A small farm.
n
A field used for farming purposes
adj
Describing the price of goods if they were purchased directly from a farm, without markup added by retailers.
n
A house that was once a farmer's residence albeit today lived in by residents whose occupation is not farming.
adj
Alternative form of farmhousey [Resembling or characteristic of a farmhouse.]
n
(New Zealand) A small farm.
adj
(nonstandard) Of, pertaining to, or resembling a farm; farmlike.
n
(mining) An owner of oil or gas leases that exchanges part of them to a farmee for services.
n
The site of a farm with its associated buildings; a farmstead.
n
A high-rise building used for growing crops or raising livestock.
n
(South Africa) A shop attached to a farm and selling its produce.
n
A stand that sells farm produce.
n
A working farm that also offers accommodation to paying guests.
n
The main building of a farm.
n
livestock on a farm
n
A farmhouse, farmyard and associated buildings
adv
toward a farm
n
The agricultural work done on a farm.
adj
Resembling or reminiscent of a farm.
n
The area around a farm, excluding the fields.
n
A Brazilian plantation, often associated with slavery during the colonial period.
n
(Scotland, historical) A fair or market where farm servants are hired for the year or half-year following.
n
(historical) Alternative form of farm [A place where agricultural and similar activities take place, especially the growing of crops or the raising of livestock.]
n
(obsolete) A measure of land mentioned in Domesday Book, supposed to have consisted of a few acres.
n
(obsolete) rent for a farm
n
(cant) A hole.
n
A wide, open space that is used to grow crops or to hold farm animals, usually enclosed by a fence, hedge or other barrier.
n
(obsolete) Field land.
n
A fig farm or orchard.
n
A country estate, farm or ranch in Spain or Hispanic America.
n
Abbreviation of field. [A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; an area of open country.]
n
Abbreviation of field. [A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; an area of open country.]
n
(obsolete) Food and lodging; board.
n
(chiefly Britain) A home farm for a rectory, used for the parish priest, vicar, pastor, or rector, usually at church expense.
n
Alternative form of glebe-land [(historical) Area of land belonging to a parish in medieval times.]
n
(figuratively) A fertile, grain-growing region.
n
(Britain) A farm, with its associated buildings; a farmhouse or manor.
v
(New Zealand, historical) To purchase land so that the remaining adjacent sections are smaller than the minimum area purchasable as freehold, thus excluding potential freeholders.
n
(UK) Part of a country estate that is farmed by the landowner or an employed farm manager, while most of the estate is rented out to tenant farmers.
n
A cage in which a laboratory animal lives, and in which it is experimented on.
adj
(of a pet) Trained not to excrete indoors.
v
(archaic, transitive) To place in a pasture; to foster.
v
(transitive) To house or board a dog (or less commonly another animal).
n
(Northern England dialect) A churchyard.
n
An old measure of land area in Mexico and Texas, approximately 177 acres. See also sitio
n
Someone or something that clears land of vegetation, usually in preparation for development.
n
(often attributive) Any local variety of a domesticated animal or plant species that has adapted over time to its ecological and cultural environment (including, in some cases, its work).
v
to sustain a living by eating produce that one harvests or hunts from the countryside.
n
(colloquial) An area around Darwin, Australia populated by homeless indigenous people.
n
(obsolete) A farm.
n
(Scotland) The farm attached to a mansion house.
n
(archaic) The land within the boundaries of a farm; a farmstead.
n
A kind of sharecropping system.
n
(of French and Italian agriculture) One who cultivates land for a share (usually half) of its yield, receiving stock, tools, and seed from the landlord.
n
(agriculture, countable) A small field, especially in Mexico or Central America, that is cleared from the jungle, cropped for a few seasons, and then abandoned for a fresh clearing.
n
(idiomatic, by extension) Farms, ranches, or agricultural land collectively.
n
(UK, Scotland, dialect, archaic) A single farmhouse; a steading.
n
(obsolete) Cattle.
n
A large farm; estate or area of land designated for agricultural growth. Often includes housing for the owner and workers.
n
The increase in value of land achieved by parcelling smaller plots into a developable unit.
n
A small ranch or large home lot, often on the outskirts of a major metropolitan area and just past the planned neighborhoods, consisting of 40 acres and a house and possibly a barn or other outbuildings.
n
(historical) A system of land tenure in which farmland was divided into irregular strips and allocated to tenants in rotation; a strip of such land.
n
A barn, cabin, dairy, or farm located in such a meadow.
n
A settlement made up of shacks; a shanty town.
n
(East Africa) An area of cultivated ground; a plot of land, a small subsistence farm for growing crops and fruit-bearing trees, often including the dwelling of the farmer.
n
A person who enters an agreement with a land owner to farm the land and then pay a portion (share) of the produce as rent; one who sharecrops.
n
A joint system of farming in which farmers make use of agricultural assets they do not own in return for some percentage of the profits.
n
Alternative form of smallholding [A small farm.]
n
A small farm.
adj
(agriculture, obsolete) Fallow, in reference to land.
n
(Scotland) A stock farm; a cattle farm.
n
In the German immigrant culture of the Texas Hill Country, one of the houses erected by farming settlers for overnight stays while visiting town for supplies and church attendance.
n
A large commercial farm, as opposed to the traditional smaller farms owned by families.
n
(historical) An auction at which a farm is let for a lease for lives.
n
(UK, Scotland, dialect, obsolete) A farm or farmstead; also, a court or farmyard.
n
(agriculture, historical) A field divided up between a number of farmers.
n
(US) A small-scale farm intermediate between a garden and a full-scale farm involving the use of tractors or livestock.
n
A market garden, a farm raising produce meant to be sold locally.
n
One's own land, where one can live peacefully and sustain oneself.
n
A farm whose agricultural land and buildings are in active use for crop production and/or the raising of livestock.
n
Acronym of World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms.
n
A fertile upland.

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