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单词 swidden
释义

Definition of swidden in English:

swidden

noun ˈswɪd(ə)nˈswidn
  • 1An area of land cleared for cultivation by slashing and burning vegetation.

    (割除和烧除植被后开出的)农田

    paddy rice and rice grown in swiddens in hilly areas provides subsistence for the majority of the population
    mass noun the forest had been reduced to swidden
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Karen response was the limited expansion of wet-rice terraces and the adoption of careful conservation measures to preserve the productivity of swiddens.
    • Respondents often contrasted this term with takin k'inal, which I have glossed as ‘dry, unfertile land,’ and was used to describe recently fallowed swiddens and early successional forest.
    • Cultivation of swidden was still common in two thirds of Finland as late as the 1830s, and was used occasionally in the whole country except for Lapland.
    • Paddy rice and rice grown in swiddens (slash-and-burn agriculture) in hilly areas provides subsistence for the majority of the population.
    • In this type of subsistence farming rice was the most important crop and several of the 92 recognized rice varieties were planted in new swiddens.
    • Forest or grassland is burned to make swiddens at the end of the dry season in February and March.
    1. 1.1mass noun The method of clearing land by slashing and burning vegetation.
      (割除和烧除植被后开出的)农田
      the practice of swidden

      割除烧去植被开垦农田的习俗。

verbˈswɪd(ə)n
[with object]
  • Clear (land) by slashing and burning vegetation.

    (割除和烧除植被后开出的)农田

    most horticulture in New Zealand was essentially swiddening
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He concluded that swiddens generally produced enough food for consumption and future planting, and only occasionally was there a need to resort to semi-domesticate crops.
    • It can be argued that in the nineteenth century, growing animal husbandry maintained slash-and-burn cultivation, as butter production was mainly based on good summer pastures created by swiddening.
    • In the areas of eastern Finland active in swiddening, most forests suitable for slash-and-burn cultivation were privately owned.
    • In these areas swiddening seems more productive in the long term than permanent agriculture, and does not require significant inputs.
    • For the same reason, landowners no longer desired to rent their forests to the landless population for swiddening, which was then regarded as most destructive for natural forests.
    • Some animals, such as red squirrels and capercaillie, suffered from swiddening as well as the felling of timber in general.
    • In the Middle Ages, the cultivation of permanent fields first began to replace swiddening on the southern coast.
    • Contrary to the tropics, swiddening in Finland also created rich cultural biotopes and new habitats important for certain species by favoring broad-leaved trees at the expense of spruce stands.

Origin

Late 18th century (as a verb, originally dialect): variant of dialect swithen 'to burn'.

Definition of swidden in US English:

swidden

nounˈswidn
  • 1An area of land cleared for cultivation by slashing and burning vegetation.

    (割除和烧除植被后开出的)农田

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Cultivation of swidden was still common in two thirds of Finland as late as the 1830s, and was used occasionally in the whole country except for Lapland.
    • Forest or grassland is burned to make swiddens at the end of the dry season in February and March.
    • Paddy rice and rice grown in swiddens (slash-and-burn agriculture) in hilly areas provides subsistence for the majority of the population.
    • The Karen response was the limited expansion of wet-rice terraces and the adoption of careful conservation measures to preserve the productivity of swiddens.
    • In this type of subsistence farming rice was the most important crop and several of the 92 recognized rice varieties were planted in new swiddens.
    • Respondents often contrasted this term with takin k'inal, which I have glossed as ‘dry, unfertile land,’ and was used to describe recently fallowed swiddens and early successional forest.
    1. 1.1 The method of clearing land by slashing and burning vegetation.
      (割除和烧除植被后开出的)农田
      the practice of swidden

      割除烧去植被开垦农田的习俗。

Origin

Late 18th century (as a verb, originally dialect): variant of dialect swithen ‘to burn’.

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更新时间:2024/11/11 9:10:41