释义 |
Definition of viniculture in English: viniculturenoun ˈvɪnɪˌkʌltʃəˈvɪnəˌkəltʃər mass nounThe cultivation of grapevines for winemaking. 酿酒葡萄栽培(业) Example sentencesExamples - The new world has helped turn wine growing and wine making into a science (viticulture and viniculture respectively).
- While the national media were busy extolling the virtues of some form of closer relationship with Australia, many young Australians were working in New Zealand wineries during vintage 2004 to gain experience of our viniculture.
- Australia's Shiraz actually came from the Rhône Valley, via one man, who was on a vine-collecting journey to Europe's great wine regions for the benefit of Australian viniculture.
- He is attempting to establish the origin of the earliest Neolithic viniculture - where grapevines were cultivated and winemaking developed.
- Once a major supplier of wine to Europe, the cold spell led to the complete collapse of viniculture in the British Isles.
- The program explores the subtleties of terroir, craftsmanship, viticulture, viniculture, cooperage and food and wine pairings over a three day session.
- What is not so well known, perhaps, is his almost messianic desire to propagate a love of fine wine and viniculture to as large an audience as possible.
- Proving many skeptics wrong, he went ahead and established Thailand's first premier winery - and with it Thailand's first serious attempt at viniculture.
- An ardent linguist proficient in ancient Oriental languages, Napp had many other passions, including horticulture, viniculture, and fruit growing.
- The Rhone - Alpes province boasts another reason for visiting the area, namely viniculture and gastronomy.
- There is an opportunity to invest in the wine plantation for five years with a guaranteed return on your investment and the rather appealing chance to check the quality of the viniculture on a fairly regular basis.
Derivativesadjectivevɪnɪˌˈkʌltʃ(ə)r(ə)l As the name is intended to suggest, it is marketed as a sort of vinicultural endowment policy for homebuyers with interest-only mortgages. Example sentencesExamples - He has already pushed our knowledge of vinicultural history back to Neolithic times (the late Stone Age).
- Fifteen vinicultural relevant pesticides were added to sea sand.
- The bond between wine and territory is essential to safeguard not only the quality of vinicultural production, but also to protect the landscape
nounˈvɪnɪˌkʌltʃ(ə)rɪstˈvɪnəˌkəltʃ(ə)rəst Each of this micro-climates provide viniculturists with endless opportunities to create wonderful wines. Example sentencesExamples - All the redundant publishers could be retrained as viniculturists and grape-tramplers.
- At that moment a viniculturist happens to arrive in his 4x4.
- The enumerators were viniculturist and fruit-grower experts as well as agricultural experts.
- They are thus farmers as well as winemakers; or, in fancier terms, both viticulturists and viniculturists.
- In desperation, viniculturists grafted millions of French vine tops onto Phylloxera resistant American root stocks, thereby saving the world's wine industry.
- Compact, folding pruning saws have been used by gardeners, viniculturists, and foresters for generations.
- What nature did not provide in sunny California, viniculturists could manipulate into a ‘style’ back at the winery.
- Thomas Jefferson was also the ‘father’ of American vineyards, having brought a viniculturist from Italy to establish wine making at Monticello.
- Three generations of family viniculturists have provided premium grapes for both native Labrusca and European Vinifera varietals.
OriginLate 19th century: from Latin vinum 'wine' + culture, on the pattern of words such as agriculture. Definition of viniculture in US English: viniculturenounˈvinəˌkəlCHərˈvɪnəˌkəltʃər The cultivation of grapevines for winemaking. 酿酒葡萄栽培(业) Example sentencesExamples - Once a major supplier of wine to Europe, the cold spell led to the complete collapse of viniculture in the British Isles.
- Australia's Shiraz actually came from the Rhône Valley, via one man, who was on a vine-collecting journey to Europe's great wine regions for the benefit of Australian viniculture.
- While the national media were busy extolling the virtues of some form of closer relationship with Australia, many young Australians were working in New Zealand wineries during vintage 2004 to gain experience of our viniculture.
- He is attempting to establish the origin of the earliest Neolithic viniculture - where grapevines were cultivated and winemaking developed.
- The new world has helped turn wine growing and wine making into a science (viticulture and viniculture respectively).
- What is not so well known, perhaps, is his almost messianic desire to propagate a love of fine wine and viniculture to as large an audience as possible.
- An ardent linguist proficient in ancient Oriental languages, Napp had many other passions, including horticulture, viniculture, and fruit growing.
- There is an opportunity to invest in the wine plantation for five years with a guaranteed return on your investment and the rather appealing chance to check the quality of the viniculture on a fairly regular basis.
- The Rhone - Alpes province boasts another reason for visiting the area, namely viniculture and gastronomy.
- Proving many skeptics wrong, he went ahead and established Thailand's first premier winery - and with it Thailand's first serious attempt at viniculture.
- The program explores the subtleties of terroir, craftsmanship, viticulture, viniculture, cooperage and food and wine pairings over a three day session.
OriginLate 19th century: from Latin vinum ‘wine’ + culture, on the pattern of words such as agriculture. |