Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Fallow
Fal′low
,Fal′low
,Fal′low
,Webster 1828 Edition
Fallow
FAL'LOW
,FAL'LOW
,FAL'LOW
,FAL'LOW
,Definition 2024
fallow
fallow
English
Noun
fallow (countable and uncountable, plural fallows)
- (agriculture, uncountable) Ground ploughed and harrowed but left unseeded for one year.
- (agriculture, uncountable) Uncultivated land.
- The ploughing or tilling of land, without sowing it for a season.
- Sinclair
- 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.
- Sinclair
Derived terms
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Translations
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Adjective
fallow
- (of agricultural land) Ploughed but left unseeded for more than one planting season.
- (figuratively) Inactive; undeveloped.
- a fallow period in one's career
Derived terms
- apple-fallow
- fallow chat
- fallow finch
- fallowness
- lay fallow
- lie fallow
Translations
Etymology 2
From Middle English falowen, falwen, from Old English fealgian (“to fallow; break up land”), from Proto-Germanic *falgōną (“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)
- (transitive) To make land fallow for agricultural purposes.
Derived terms
Translations
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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 pal̃vas 'sallow, wan', Russian половый (polovyj) 'wan, light yellow', Serbo-Croatian plâv 'blond, blue', Ancient Greek πολιός (poliós) 'grey'), from Proto-Indo-European *pel- 'pale'.
Adjective
fallow (comparative more fallow, superlative most fallow)
- Of a pale red or yellow, light brown; dun.
- a fallow deer or greyhound
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Shakespeare to this entry?)
Related terms
Translations
References
- “fallow” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary (2001).