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Examples
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However, because of the poor repayment record this practice has largely been discontinued with some exceptions, and land preparation is left to the cultivator's initiative.
Chapter 6 1995
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The irrigation agency then endeavors to make the necessary water available to meet that sanction by incorporating the cultivator's holding in an appropriate rotational schedule.
Chapter 10 1995
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From the cultivator's viewpoint, the most desirable situation would be to have water available "on demand", preferably demand by the individual.
Chapter 11 1995
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- The low remuneration of shifting cultivation, relative to its labour requirements and to the shifting cultivator's labour supply.
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In Nepaul these are either heaped on a rude scaffolding, near the cultivator's house, or, more commonly, they are suspended from the branches of the trees close by, where, exposed to wind and weather, the hard and tough sheath of the seed cones preserves the grain for many months uninjured.
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It is an established rule in the Agency that the cultivator's accounts of one season shall be definitively settled before the commencement of the next, and that no outstanding balances shall remain over.
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All the Tomatoes can be grown and ripened under glass in almost any fashion which may suit the cultivator's convenience.
The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots 16th Edition Sutton and Sons
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Fourth year's expenditure: hire of six hands for three months, cleaning land, and manuring plants, about £60 sterling, and the like, at the cultivator's option, for the fifth year.
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Indeed, it will be the cultivator's fault if they do not increase in number and carry finer heads of bloom in succeeding years.
The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots 16th Edition Sutton and Sons
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Some noble Hemlocks are occasionally seen in rude situations, where the cultivator's art has not interrupted their spontaneous growth; and the poet and the naturalist are inspired with a more pleasing admiration of their beauty, because they have seen them only where the solitary birds sing their wild notes, and where the heart is unmolested by the crowding tumult of human settlements.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 06, No. 35, September, 1860 Various
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