graniculture

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English

Etymology

From Italian granicoltura.

Noun

graniculture (uncountable)

  1. Wheat growing.
    • 1912, U.S. Government Printing Office, Congressional Serial Set:
      The industries of the Sacramento basin include mining, smelting, lumbering, dairying, grazing, orchard farming, graniculture, sugar manufacture, and fishing.
    • 1919, Robert Franz Foerster, The Italian Emigration of Our Times, volume 20:
      He said, "A large cultural unit, and an agrarian rotation which permits the soil to lie fallow: these are the two salient characteristics of the latifundium and of Sicilian graniculture. If the rains were more abundant we should have rich pastures, plenty of manure, and a totally different agrarian rotation. The want of rains and the scarcity of flowing water thus potently and invincibly influence the entire agrarian economy of Sicily."
    • 1976, K. K. Ruthven, Myth:
      Euhemerists who believed that Ceres was deified for having taught graniculture to grateful Greeks were now informed that this event had taken place in 1030 B.C.