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Farming   /fˈɑrmɪŋ/   Listen
Farming

noun
1.
The practice of cultivating the land or raising stock.  Synonyms: agriculture, husbandry.
2.
Agriculture considered as an occupation or way of life.  Synonym: land.  "There's no work on the land any more"
adjective
1.
Relating to rural matters.  Synonyms: agrarian, agricultural.  "Farming communities"



Farm

verb
(past & past part. farmed; pres. part. farming)
1.
Be a farmer; work as a farmer.
2.
Collect fees or profits.
3.
Cultivate by growing, often involving improvements by means of agricultural techniques.  Synonyms: grow, produce, raise.  "They produce good ham in Parma" , "We grow wheat here" , "We raise hogs here"



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"Farming" Quotes from Famous Books



... appear for John Turnbull and William Sims," he said, "and I would support the appeal of Mr. Probert. My clients, who are farming men, took no part whatever in the fray, which is the serious portion of the affair. While I am ready to admit that they were engaged in the illegal operation of aiding in the landing of contraband goods, ...
— Through Russian Snows - A Story of Napoleon's Retreat from Moscow • G. A Henty

... Mercury of last Saturday contains no less than seventy advertisements relating to the sale of farming stock; and a majority of these are cases in which the tenant of the farm on which a sale is announced is described as one "quitting the occupation," or "retiring from business." We should like to know how many of those parties have ...
— The Economist - Volume 1, No. 3 • Various

... prove a boon to the wives of our working men. What in the world does become of the infants of poor women who are forced to work all day for their maintenance? Is it not a miracle if something almost worse than "farming"—death from negligence, fire, or bad nursing—does not occur to them? The good ladies who have founded, and themselves work, these creches are surely meeting a confessed necessity. I paid a visit one day to 4, Bulstrode Street, where one of these useful institutions ...
— Mystic London: - or, Phases of occult life in the metropolis • Charles Maurice Davies

... his pupils with wooden squares, and sometimes with his fists, and used his feet by kicking them, and dragged them by the hair of the head. He had also entered into the trade of cattle grazing and farming—dealt in black cattle—in the shipping business—and in ...
— Life Of Johnson, Vol. 2 • Boswell, Edited by Birkbeck Hill

... course, Emerson presents himself as an author of books, and primarily as an essayist, rather than as a winning, entrancing speaker. His essays have a greater variety of tone than is commonly recognized. Many of them, like "Manners," "Farming," "Books," "Eloquence," "Old Age," exhibit a shrewd prudential wisdom, a sort of Yankee instinct for "the milk in the pan," that reminds one of Ben Franklin. Like most of the greater New England writers, he could be, on occasion, an admirable local historian. ...
— The American Spirit in Literature, - A Chronicle of Great Interpreters, Volume 34 in The - Chronicles Of America Series • Bliss Perry


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