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Definition of plough verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

plough

verb
 
/plaʊ/
 
/plaʊ/
(British English)
(North American English plow)
[transitive, intransitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they plough
 
/plaʊ/
 
/plaʊ/
he / she / it ploughs
 
/plaʊz/
 
/plaʊz/
past simple ploughed
 
/plaʊd/
 
/plaʊd/
past participle ploughed
 
/plaʊd/
 
/plaʊd/
-ing form ploughing
 
/ˈplaʊɪŋ/
 
/ˈplaʊɪŋ/
Idioms Phrasal Verbs
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  1. plough (something) to dig and turn over a field or other area of land with a plough
    • ploughed fields
    Collocations FarmingFarmingGrowing food and raising animals
    • plant trees/​seeds/​crops/​vines/​barley
    • grow/​produce corn/​wheat/​rice/​fruit
    • plough/(North American English) plow land/​a field
    • sow/​harvest seeds/​crops/​fields
    • spread manure/​fertilizer on something
    • cultivate/​irrigate/​water/​contaminate crops/​plants/​fields/​land
    • damage/​destroy/​lose your crop
    • ripen/​pick fruit/​berries/​grapes
    • press/​dry/​ferment grapes
    • grind/​thresh grain/​corn/​wheat
    • raise/​rear/​keep chickens/​poultry/​cattle/​pigs
    • raise/​breed/​feed/​graze livestock/​cattle/​sheep
    • kill/​slaughter livestock
    • preserve/​smoke/​cure/​salt meat
    Modern farming
    • run a fish farm/​an organic dairy farm
    • engage in/​be involved in intensive (pig/​fish) farming
    • use/​apply (chemical/​organic) fertilizer/​insecticides/​pesticides
    • begin/​do/​conduct field trials of GM (= genetically modified) crops
    • grow/​develop GM crops/​seeds/​plants/​foods
    • fund/​invest in genetic engineering/​research
    • improve/​increase crop yields
    • face/​suffer from/​alleviate food shortages
    • label food that contains GMOs (= genetically modified organisms)
    • eliminate/​reduce farm subsidies
    • oppose/​be against factory farming/​GM food
    • promote/​encourage/​support organic/​sustainable farming
    Topics Farmingc2
    Word Originlate Old English plōh, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ploeg and German Pflug. The spelling plough became common in England in the 18th cent.; earlier (16th–17th cents) the noun was normally spelled plough, the verb plow.
Idioms
plough a lonely, your own, etc., furrow
  1. (literary) to do things that other people do not do, or be interested in things that other people are not interested in
trait
noun
 
 
From the Word list
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B2
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