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Vocabulary 6
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Seeds: the grains or ripened ovules of plants used for sowing.
Noun. Strawberries have their seeds on the outside.
Area: a particular extent of space or surface or one serving a special function.
Noun. Avoid touching the infected area unnecessarily.
Wildlife: living things and especially mammals, birds, and fishes that are neither human nor domesticated
noun, often attributive. The rich wildlife attracts a number of tourists cruises.
Till: or 'til or less commonly til : UNTIL.
Preposition. Mix till incorporated and add the walnuts and chocolate chips just till mixed
Tame: reduced from a state of native wildness especially so as to be tractable and useful to humans : DOMESTICATED.
Adjective. Love can tame wild ferocious animals.
Settle: to place so as to stay.
Verb. Now we can settle this amicably.
Root: any subterranean plant part (such as a true root or a bulb, tuber, rootstock, or other modified stem) especially when fleshy and edible
Noun, often attributive. Laser-guided system burns follicles at the root.
Plow: an implement used to cut, lift, and turn over soil especially in preparing a seedbed
Noun. Jeb can't work the plow.
Nomadic: of, relating to, or characteristic of nomads.
Adjective. The majority have a nomadic lifestyle.
Nomad: a member of a people who have no fixed residence but move from place to place usually seasonally and within a well-defined territory
Noun. His is a nomad's life, and lonely.
Hunter-gatherer: a member of a culture in which food is obtained by hunting, fishing, and foraging rather than by agriculture or animal husbandry
Noun. The Neanderthal man, hunter-gatherer, seeks nourishment.
Hunt: to search out.
Verb. Anything to end your never-ending house hunt.
Gather: PICK, HARVEST.
Verb. Please help the beekeeper to gather honey.
Forage: food for animals especially when taken by browsing or grazing.
Noun. Livestock had been kept alive by ensuring access to water and providing forage and supplemental nutrients.
Field: an area of cleared enclosed land used for cultivation or pasture.
Noun. Each field can only accept data corresponding to the specified field type.
Exploit: to make use of meanly or unfairly for one's own advantage.
Verb. Employers must not exploit this relationship of authority for his/her purposes.
Domesticate: to adapt (an animal or plant) over time from a wild or natural state especially by selective breeding to life in close association with and to the benefit of humans
Verb. You don't domesticate a cat like that.
Dig: to break up, turn, or loosen (earth) with an implement.
Verb. This favourable circumstance allows landowners to dig wells and have access to water directly.
Cultivate: to prepare or prepare and use for the raising of crops.
Verb. We cultivate passion for underserved healthcare through interprofessional teamwork.
Berry: a pulpy and usually edible fruit (such as a strawberry, raspberry, or checkerberry) of small size irrespective of its structure.
Noun. Apple and berry wine is also worth degustation.