Sinonimi & Anagrammi | Parola Inglese ARABLE
ARABLE
Numero di lettere
6
È palindromo
No
Esempi di utilizzo di ARABLE in una frase
- Arable land (from the , "able to be ploughed") is any land capable of being ploughed and used to grow crops.
- To cope with the lack of flat arable land, farming is carried out on a terrace system of cultivation.
- Since Macau has little arable land and few natural resources, it depends on mainland China for most of its food, fresh water, and energy imports.
- Nicaragua is known as "the breadbasket of Central America" due to having the most fertile soil and arable land in all of Central America.
- Natural resources: natural gas, petroleum, peat, limestone, iodised salt, sand and gravel, arable land.
- The name is used for specialized units such as arable farms, vegetable farms, fruit farms, dairy, pig and poultry farms, and land used for the production of natural fiber, biofuel, and other commodities.
- Initially it was a rather small village, built on the estate of Count , commander of the Timișoara Fortress (1716–1729) after the capitulation of the Ottomans following the siege of 1716, with about 500 inhabitants and little arable land.
- Glendale is the anglicised version of the Gaelic Gleann Dail, which means valley of fertile, low-lying arable land.
- Anguilla's coral and limestone terrain provide no subsistence possibilities for forests, woodland, pastures, crops, or arable lands.
- With increasing populations, lack of arable land and few irrigation options, malnutrition has been a historic problem for the Chepang despite forest supplements.
- The county was named from a delta of arable land at the mouth of the Uncompahgre River, where it flows into the Gunnison River.
- The valley is arid, and is only arable due to the water from the Gunnison Tunnel and Ridgway Reservoir.
- Army, noted that the site of present-day Crawfordsville was ideal for settlement, surrounded by deciduous forest and potentially arable land, with water provided by a nearby creek, later named Sugar Creek, that was a southern tributary of the Wabash River.
- As part of a large-scale conversion of arable land away from cotton (due to the mass-destruction from the cotton boll weevil) and toward sweet potatoes in the late 19th century, the city gave itself the nickname "Sweet Potato Capital of the Nation" at the turn of the 20th century.
- Here Pemaquid, Matinicus, Monhegan, Cape Anawhagen…are all filled with dwelling houses and stages for fishermen, and have plenty of cattle, arable lands and marshes.
- It combines an Old English personal name, "Ucca" with the Old English locational term, "feld", the latter denoting open country or unencumbered ground (or, from the 10th century onwards, arable land).
- Long-farmed pastures and planted, arable fields line much of the valley; an indication of the wealth these brought to landowners is in ten large listed houses with statutorily recognised and protected parks.
- It was taxed on c120 acres (c50 hectares) of arable ploughland shared by the Vikings Vilts and Gamel Bern.
- In the Roman period, the sands were easily worked as arable land and the ironstone was dug for smelting.
- It occupies an area of , and is divided into the Upper Harz (Oberharz) in the northwest, which is up to 800 m high, apart from the 1,100 m high Brocken massif, and the Lower Harz (Unterharz) in the east which is up to around 400 m high and whose plateaus are capable of supporting arable farming.
Cerca ARABLE su:
Wikipedia
(Italiano) Wiktionary
(Italiano) Wikipedia
(Inglese) Wiktionary
(Inglese) Google Answers
(Inglese) Britannica
(Inglese)
(Italiano) Wiktionary
(Italiano) Wikipedia
(Inglese) Wiktionary
(Inglese) Google Answers
(Inglese) Britannica
(Inglese)
La preparazione della pagina ha richiesto: 212,07 ms.