misfarm

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

mis- +‎ farm

Verb[edit]

misfarm (third-person singular simple present misfarms, present participle misfarming, simple past and past participle misfarmed)

  1. To do a poor job of farming.
    • 2004, Ronald Jager, The Fate of Family Farming: Variations on an American Idea, page 74:
      The poet seems to inwardly adopt as his ancestors all the generations of farmers — good and bad, but mostly bad — who for two hundred years have farmed and misfarmed this region along the Kentucky River.
    • 2012, Kevin McIlvoy, The Complete History of New Mexico:
      The stretch of land that Father inherited from his father was misfarmed by every generation for over seventy-five years and was gray, unwilling soil.
    • 2019, Emile Lester, Liberalism and Leadership: The Irony of Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., page 106:
      Schlesinger contrasts Morgan's approach unfavorably with the more incentive-based approaches of his RVA codirectors David Lilienthal and H.A. Morgan, neither of whom shared Arthur Morgan's or Roosevelt's passion for using the TVA as a means of social mastery: Where Arthur Morgan would pass a law depriving a farmer of land he has misfarmed, Lilienthal and H. A. Morgan would offer him inducements to use his land more wisely.

Anagrams[edit]