different between unseeded vs fallow

unseeded

English

Etymology

un- +? seeded

Adjective

unseeded (not comparable)

  1. Not seeded (in any sense).
  2. (sports) Not being a seed, not being in a seed position.

Antonyms

  • seeded

unseeded From the web:



fallow

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?fæl??/
  • (US) enPR: f?l??, IPA(key): /?fælo?/
  • Rhymes: -æl??

Etymology 1

From Middle English falwe, from Old English fealh (fallow land), from Proto-West Germanic *falgu (compare Saterland Frisian falge, Dutch valg, German Felge), from Proto-Indo-European *pol?éh? (arable land) (compare Gaulish olca, Russian ??????? (polosá)).

Noun

fallow (countable and uncountable, plural fallows)

  1. (agriculture, uncountable) Ground ploughed and harrowed but left unseeded for one year.
  2. (agriculture, uncountable) Uncultivated land.
  3. The ploughing or tilling of land, without sowing it for a season.
    • 1832, Sir John Sinclair, The Code of Agriculture
      By a complete summer fallow, land is rendered tender and mellow. The fallow gives it a better tilth than can be given by a fallow crop.
Derived terms
Translations

Adjective

fallow (comparative more fallow, superlative most fallow)

  1. (of agricultural land) Ploughed but left unseeded for more than one planting season.
  2. (of agricultural land) Left unworked and uncropped for some amount of time.
  3. (figuratively) Inactive; undeveloped.
Synonyms
  • (figuratively inactive): abeyant, dormant, latent; see also Thesaurus:inactive
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 2

From Middle English falowen, falwen, from Old English fealgian (to fallow; break up land), from Proto-West Germanic *falg?n (to fallow). Cognate with Dutch valgen (to plow lightly; fallow), German Low German falgen (to till; dig a hole).

Verb

fallow (third-person singular simple present fallows, present participle fallowing, simple past and past participle fallowed)

  1. (transitive) To make land fallow for agricultural purposes.
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 3

From Middle English falwe, from Old English fealu, from Proto-Germanic *falwaz (compare West Frisian feal, Dutch vaal, German falb, fahl), from Proto-Indo-European *polwos (compare Lithuanian pal?vas (sallow, wan), Russian ??????? (polovyj, wan, light yellow), Serbo-Croatian plâv (blond, blue), Ancient Greek ?????? (poliós, grey)), from Proto-Indo-European *pelH- (pale, gray).

Adjective

fallow (comparative more fallow, superlative most fallow)

  1. (color) Of a pale red or yellow, light brown; dun.
Related terms
  • fallow deer
Translations

References

  • Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “fallow”, in Online Etymology Dictionary

fallow From the web:

  • what fallow means
  • what follows the g2 phase
  • what follows december 2nd
  • what follows cytokinesis
  • what followed the soap blizzard of 1378
  • what follows diastole
  • what followed the boston tea party
  • what followed the boston tea party
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like