agri-
pref.(前缀)
pref.(前缀)
- Variant of agro-
agro-的变体
agri-
Word Origin
1
a combining form with the meaning “agriculture, farming,” used in the formation of compound words:
agribusiness.
Origin
extracted from agriculture, with agri taken as a combining form with the linking vowel -i-
Related Words
- agr-
- agribiz
- agribusiness
- agrichemical
agri-a combining form of agriculture, as in agribusiness.
1944 Ann. Admin. Rep. Sind ForestDept. 1942–3 (Karachi) iii. 13The details of Irrigated plantation areas leased for agri-silviculture, etc., have been given above.
1973 Albertan (Calgary, Alberta) 24 Mar. 1/1 The compromise on a new site for the controversial agrimart in northeast Calgary seems to have collapsed, mayor Rod Sykes announced Friday.
1973 N.Y. Times 16 July 29/1Our monopoly of ‘agripower’ will provide leverage for forcing a quick stabilization of currencies as well as of domestic living costs.
1981 1982 Yearbk. Sci. & Future 318/2Now communication technology is being developed to help the agricommunity make decisions more quickly and efficiently.
1981 J. May Many-colored Land i. xi. 66A young couple and two older men, locals by the look of their agrigarb, sat at window tables.
1991 Washington Post 28 June f3/2 ‘There are tremendous opportunities for agricultural biopesticides,’ asserts Leo Kim, chief technical officer at Mycogen, a San Diego, Calif. -based agrigenetics company.
2002 A. Mednick Three Stories 18Rastas believe in ‘ital’ (total and natural) foods, or ‘agridishes’, foods which grew from the earth.
1977 Fortune Apr. 33/2 Mr. Bradshaw's propositions apply not only to the oil industry but, in a lesser degree, to other industries such as the *agri-food business.
1984 N. B. L. Ilwall & A. R. Hutchinson in WorldAgric. Econ. & Rural SociolAbstr. (1985) 27 449/2 (title)Market opportunities in the Tayside agri-food sector.
2005 Guelph (Ontario) Mercury (Nexis) 7 Sept. a4 Key to answers in this area is an investment in agri-food research.
1959 Jrnl. FarmEcon. 41 17The economy of Cuba is based on sugar, that of Ghana on cocoa and to lesser extent that of Brazil on coffee, with little prospect for the eventual establishment of a broader *agri-industrial economic base.
1999 Harrowsmith Country Life Feb. 14/4 Can..a 1,500-head cattle operation, a relative newcomer on the agri-industrial scene..be considered normal?
1950 Internat. Affairs 26 545The author gives his own version of..social relationship in farming from capture to cultivation and from ‘agri-culture’ to ‘*agri-industry’.
1981 New Farm Mar.–Apr. 31/2 And as Kansans, whose family memories spanned the history of the state from the cattle drives to the agri-industry of wheat, they were perhaps peculiarly vulnerable to the deepening worries about soil loss, pollution, resource depletion.
2001 Independent 10 July ii. 5/4 Organic farming needs science that is far more subtle than the kind that drives agri-industry, yet some of its guiding ideas seem as implausible as rain-dances.
1976 Times 9 Feb. 17/7 This rise will be somewhat higher than on the Continent because of the United Kingdom's next transitional step and the Commission's *agri-monetary proposals for the ‘joint float’ currencies.
2000 Farmers Weekly 18–24 Feb. 73/4 Any chance of agri-monetary compensation that we Ulster farmers had will have been suspended with the assembly.
1978 Times 20 Jan. (Emilia-Romagna Suppl. ) p. ii/3 (advt.)As part of its efforts to foster low cost holiday-making, the regional authority is to make loans to fit out farmhouses which can then be rented in certain parts of the year (‘*agri-tourism’).
1997 Wellsboro (Pennsylvania) Gaz. 2 Apr. (Outdoors section) 6/4Pennsylvania Farm Vocation Association, $3,000, to promote agri-tourism through a ‘see the Real PA!’ advertising and public relations program. [ granted]
2003 Independent 5 Apr. (Traveller section) 5/2 Agritourism holidays are also on the increase in Spain. These casas rurales offer good value for money and are also very popular with Spanish holidaymakers.
agri-
Prefix
- Denoting agriculture.
Etymology
Originally from Latin ager, agrī (“field”), re-inforced by English agriculture (itself deriving from the original Latin root).
Cognate (via Proto-Indo-European) to English acre.
Usage notes
Derived terms
English words prefixed with agri-