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All plough synonyms

plough
P p

noun plough

  • farmer — Fannie (Merritt) [mer-it] /ˈmɛr ɪt/ (Show IPA), 1857–1915, U.S. authority on cooking.
  • agriculturalist — An agriculturalist is someone who is an expert on agriculture and who advises farmers.
  • harvester — a person who harvests; reaper.
  • breeder — Breeders are people who breed animals or plants.
  • cob — A cob is a type of short strong horse.
  • agronomist — An agronomist is someone who studies the growing and harvesting of crops.
  • homesteader — the owner or holder of a homestead.
  • mattock — an instrument for loosening the soil in digging, shaped like a pickax, but having one end broad instead of pointed.
  • gleaner — to gather slowly and laboriously, bit by bit.
  • cultivator — A cultivator is a tool or machine which is used to break up the earth or to remove weeds, for example in a garden or field.
  • feeder — a person or thing that supplies food or feeds something.
  • cropper — a person who cultivates or harvests a crop
  • grazer — to touch or rub something lightly, or so as to produce slight abrasion, in passing: to graze against a rough wall.
  • horticulturist — the cultivation of a garden, orchard, or nursery; the cultivation of flowers, fruits, vegetables, or ornamental plants.

adj plough

  • cultivable — (of land) capable of being cultivated
  • arable — Arable farming involves growing crops such as wheat and barley rather than keeping animals or growing fruit and vegetables. Arable land is land that is used for arable farming.

verb plough

  • hoeRichard, 1812–86, U.S. inventor and manufacturer of printing-press equipment.
  • mulching — (agriculture) Used for applying a mulch.
  • hoed — a long-handled implement having a thin, flat blade usually set transversely, used to break up the surface of the ground, destroy weeds, etc.
  • hoeing — a long-handled implement having a thin, flat blade usually set transversely, used to break up the surface of the ground, destroy weeds, etc.
  • hoes — a long-handled implement having a thin, flat blade usually set transversely, used to break up the surface of the ground, destroy weeds, etc.

adjective plough

  • farmable — a tract of land, usually with a house, barn, silo, etc., on which crops and often livestock are raised for livelihood.
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