All tillage synonyms
tillΒ·age
T t noun tillage
- fertilising β Present participle of fertilise.
- groundskeeping β The activity of tending an area of land for aesthetic or functional purposes; typically as an employee of a person or institution.
- working β exertion or effort directed to produce or accomplish something; labor; toil.
- gleaning β the act of a person who gleans.
- fertilizing β Present participle of fertilize.
- workings β Plural form of working.
- agriculture β Agriculture is farming and the methods that are used to raise and look after crops and animals.
- agrology β the scientific study of soils and their potential productivity
- quinta β an inn, especially one in the countryside.
- grazing β a touching or rubbing lightly in passing.
- agronomics β the branch of economics dealing with the distribution, management, and productivity of land
- farming β a tract of land, usually with a house, barn, silo, etc., on which crops and often livestock are raised for livelihood.
- farmland β land under cultivation or capable of being cultivated: to protect valuable farmland from erosion.
- feeding β food, especially for farm animals, as cattle, horses or chickens.
- agronomy β the science of cultivation of land, soil management, and crop production
- growing β becoming greater in quantity, size, extent, or intensity: growing discontent among industrial workers.
- land β Edwin Herbert, 1909β91, U.S. inventor and businessman: created the Polaroid camera.
- homesteading β a dwelling with its land and buildings, occupied by the owner as a home and exempted by a homestead law from seizure or sale for debt.
- cultivation β the planting, tending, improving, or harvesting of crops or plants
- mead β George Herbert, 1863β1931, U.S. philosopher and author.
- lea β Homer, 1876β1912, U.S. soldier and author: adviser 1911β12 to Sun Yat-sen in China.
- husbandry β the cultivation and production of edible crops or of animals for food; agriculture; farming.
- hydroponics β the cultivation of plants by placing the roots in liquid nutrient solutions rather than in soil; soilless growth of plants. Compare aeroculture, geoponics (def 2).
- gleanings β the act of a person who gleans.
- meads β George Herbert, 1863β1931, U.S. philosopher and author.
- glebe β Also called glebe land. Chiefly British. the cultivable land owned by a parish church or ecclesiastical benefice.
- cropland β an area of land on which crops are grown
- loam β a rich, friable soil containing a relatively equal mixture of sand and silt and a somewhat smaller proportion of clay.
- digging β to make one's way or work by or as by removing or turning over material: to dig through the files.
- gardening β a plot of ground, usually near a house, where flowers, shrubs, vegetables, fruits, or herbs are cultivated.
- floriculture β the cultivation of flowers or flowering plants, especially for ornamental purposes.
- continents β one of the main landmasses of the globe, usually reckoned as seven in number (Europe, Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Australia, and Antarctica).
- field β Cyrus West, 1819β92, U.S. financier: projector of the first Atlantic cable.
- moorland β an area of moors, especially country abounding in heather.
- geoponics β the art or science of agriculture.