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    1. To grow a greener lawn, have healthier trees, and cultivate bigger vegetables, the soil needs to be enriched


    2. Cultivate the realisation that eternity is long and that that which is slowly built up endures forever


    3. Needless to say he was very grateful for her thoughtfulness; something she made a point to cultivate with her soldiers


    4. She took great care to cultivate a trusting relationship with the young leaders of this society as it grew


    5. They have more land than they have stock to cultivate


    6. Prayer is the place we cultivate intimacy with God, and we


    7. cultivate the gifts of the Spirit


    8. Though it may cost no more labour to cultivate the one than the other, it must always cost more to bring the produce of the distant land to market


    9. We see frequently societies of merchants in London, and other trading towns, purchase waste lands in our sugar colonies, which they expect to improve and cultivate with profit, by means of factors and agents, notwithstanding the great distance and the uncertain returns, from the defective administration of justice in those countries


    10. Nobody will attempt to improve and cultivate in the same manner the most fertile lands of Scotland, Ireland, or the corn provinces of North America, though, from the more exact administration of justice in these countries, more regular returns might be expected

    11. When the price of cattle, for example, rises so high, that it is as profitable to cultivate land in order to raise food for them as in order to raise food for man, it cannot well go higher


    12. Had the Scotch cattle been always confined to the market of Scotland, in a country in which the quantity of land, which can be applied to no other purpose but the feeding of cattle, is so great in proportion to what can be applied to other purposes, it is scarce possible, perhaps, that their price could ever have risen so high as to render it profitable to cultivate land for the sake of feeding them


    13. If, notwithstanding a great rise in the price, it still continues to prevail through a considerable part of the country, it is owing in many places, no doubt, to ignorance and attachment to old customs, but, in most places, to the unavoidable obstructions which the natural course of things opposes to the immediate or speedy establishment of a better system : first, to the poverty of the tenants, to their not having yet had time to acquire a stock of cattle sufficient to cultivate their lands more completely, the same rise of price, which would render it advantageous for them to maintain a greater stock, rendering it more difficult for them to acquire it; and, secondly, to their not having yet had time to put their lands in condition to maintain this greater stock properly, supposing they were capable of acquiring it


    14. The same causes, therefore, the want of manure, and the disproportion between the stock employed in cultivation and the land which it is destined to cultivate, are likely to introduce there a system of husbandry, not unlike that which still continues to take place in so many parts of Scotland


    15. They make scarce any manure for their corn fields, he says ; but when one piece of ground has been exhausted by continual cropping, they clear and cultivate another piece of fresh land; and when that is exhausted, proceed to a third


    16. Though it is late, therefore, in the progress of improvement, before cattle can bring such a price as to render it profitable to cultivate land for the sake of feeding them; yet of all the different parts which compose this second sort of rude produce, they are perhaps the first which bring this price ; because, till they bring it, it seems impossible that improvement can be brought near even to that degree of perfection to which it has arrived in many parts of Europe


    17. As wealth and luxury increase, therefore, in consequence of improvement and cultivation, the price of poultry gradually rises above that of butcher's meat, till at last it gets so high, that it becomes profitable to cultivate land for the sake of feeding them


    18. Land, however improved, will yield no revenue without a circulating capital, which maintains the labourers who cultivate and collect its produce


    19. Lands, mines, and fisheries, require all both a fixed and circulating capital to cultivate them; and their produce replaces, with a profit not only those capitals, but all the others in the society


    20. It is your duty and your interest to extract only the good seed and cultivate it

    21. A particular country, in the same manner as a particular person, may frequently not have capital sufficient both to improve and cultivate all its lands, to manufacture and prepare their whole rude produce for immediate use and consumption, and to transport the surplus part either of the rude or manufactured produce to those distant markets, where it can be exchanged for something for which there is a demand at home


    22. The inhabitants of many different parts of Great Britain have not capital sufficient to improve and cultivate all their lands


    23. The beauty of the country, besides, the pleasure of a country life, the tranquillity of mind which it promises, and, wherever the injustice of human laws does not disturb it, the independency which it really affords, have charms that, more or less, attract everybody; and as to cultivate the ground was the original destination of man, so, in every stage of his existence, he seems to retain a predilection for this primitive employment


    24. If the society has not acquired sufficient capital, both to cultivate all its lands, and to manufacture in the completest manner the whole of its rude produce, there is even a considerable advantage that the rude produce should be exported by a foreign capital, in order that the whole stock of the society may be employed in more useful purposes


    25. A villain, enfranchised, and at the same time allowed to continue in possession of the land, having no stock of his own, could cultivate it only by means of what the landlord advanced to him, and must therefore have been what the French call a metayer


    26. Those who cultivate the land, therefore, have a monopoly against their countrymen for the two greatest and most important articles of land produce, bread and butcher's meat


    27. and the relationships you need to cultivate and nurture that will help


    28. The ancients say cultivate the golden energy which surpasses lesser energy


    29. This means to heal the body cultivate the mind and spirit as one


    30. The farmer will not be able to cultivate much better ; the landlord will not be able to live much better

    31. The power to choose, which you cultivate and strengthen through mindfulness and meditation, is the most powerful ability that you have


    32. But if he had been at liberty to sell his whole crop to a corn mercliant as fast as he could thresh it out, his whole capital might have returned immediately to the land, and have been employed in buying more cattle, and hiring more servants, in order to improve and cultivate it better


    33. But by being obliged to sell his corn by retail, he was obliged to keep a great part of his capital in his granaries and stack-yard through the year, and could not therefore cultivate so well as with the same capital he might otherwise have done


    34. It is good to learn to cultivate a state of flow in whatever you do


    35. Every colonist gets more land than he can possibly cultivate


    36. It would be the interest of the former, therefore, to cultivate that good-will, by


    37. In this critical situation of its affairs the papal court was at sufficient pains to cultivate the friendship of the powerful sovereigns of France and Spain, of whom the latter was at that time emperor of Germany


    38. The private tampering of some of the neighbouring clergy, sometimes to procure, but more frequently to prevent this concurrence, and the popular arts which they cultivate, in order to enable them upon such occasions to tamper more effectually, are perhaps the causes which principally keep up whatever remains of the old fanatical spirit, either in the clergy or in the people of Scotland


    39. There are said to be 108 virtues to cultivate and 108 defilements to avoid


    40. It frequently takes from the tenant so great a part of his capital, and thereby diminishes so much his ability to cultivate the land, that he finds it more difficult to pay a small rent than it would otherwise have been to pay a great one

    41. Whatever diminishes his ability to cultivate, necessarily keeps down, below what it would otherwise have been, the most important part of the revenue of the community


    42. It is of importance that the landlord should be encouraged to cultivate a part of his own land


    43. It might be of importance, however, that the abatement of the tax should encourage him to cultivate to a certain extent only


    44. If the landlords should, the greater part of them, be tempted to farm the whole of their own lands, the country (instead of sober and industrious tenants, who are bound by their own interest to cultivate as well as their capital and skill will allow them) would be filled with idle and profligate bailiffs, whose abusive management would soon degrade the cultivation, and reduce the annual produce of the land, to the diminution, not only of the revenue of their masters, but of the most important part of that of the whole society


    45. He is, upon this account, frequently afraid to have a good team of horses or oxen, but endeavours to cultivate with the meanest and most wretched instrutnents of husbandry that he can


    46. It is Evil‘s custom to shield itself from criticism in the (artful) manner it encourages (a) Moral Neutrality by obfuscating notions of Good and Evil, a condition of the mind susceptible to individuals who have failed in their efforts to cultivate a proper spiritual and moral awareness of the fundamental agencies separating the two and therefore likely to arrive at the conclusion that such differences are either objectively unverifiable or the product of social convention(s)


    47. They also cultivate rice, corn,


    48. In Odyssey Fulfilled the author seems to endeavor to cultivate the elements that produce trust: attention and detail, passion and desire, memory and history, gratitude and patriotism


    49. Trent and some of the other political types were seeking new rows to hoe, new melon patches to cultivate


    50. cultivate an avocation in the margin of life










































    1. To the south there is a vast field of cultivated vegetables


    2. “Anyway, I’ve cultivated one of our guards, the one over there by the… don’t look…”


    3. These were long and cultivated and made me wonder whether he played music as well as doing every thing else


    4. Old Ted was told to make enquiries of the politician’s kitchen staff to find out where these plums were cultivated


    5. In its place he carefully cultivated the most beautiful, the tastiest and the most famous patch of artichokes in the whole of the known world


    6. It should have been a two hour hike thru well cultivated farmlands til they reached the harbor


    7. kitchen staff to find out where these plums were cultivated


    8. Ted carefully cultivated his special plants


    9. In its place he carefully cultivated the


    10. It was a densely populated area but he had every inch cultivated at least one level deep including the greenhouse atop his house where he kept tender lowland crops

    11. The rent of the land which affords such singular and esteemed productions, like the rent of some vineyards in France of a peculiarly happy soil and situation, bears no regular proportion to the rent of other equally fertile and equally well cultivated land in its neighbourhood


    12. China has been long one of the richest, that is, one of the most fertile, best cultivated, most industrious, and most populous, countries in the world


    13. In countries ill cultivated, and worse inhabited, the greater part of landlords and


    14. every body ; but as it is not much cultivated through the greater part of the country, it can


    15. A great part of the cultivated lands must be employed in rearing and fattening cattle ; of which the price, therefore, must be sufficient to pay, not only the labour necessary for tending them, but the rent which the landlord, and the profit which the farmer, could have drawn from such land employed in tillage


    16. It is convenient for the maintenance of the cattle employed in the cultivation of the corn; and its high rent is, in this case, not so properly paid from the value of its own produce, as from that of the corn lands which are cultivated by means of it


    17. With regard to the supposed scarcity of corn occasioned by the multiplication of vineyards, corn is nowhere in France more carefully cultivated than in the wine provinces, where the land is fit for producing it: as in Burgundy, Guienne, and the Upper Languedoc


    18. For though such vineyards are in general more carefully cultivated than most others, the high price of the wine seems to be, not so much the effect, as the cause of this careful cultivation


    19. The greater part of the cultivated lands in Cochin China are employed in producing corn and rice, the food of the great body of the people


    20. The respective prices of corn, rice, and sugar, are there probably in the natural proportion, or in that which naturally takes place in the different crops of the greater part of cultivated land, and which recompenses the landlord and farmer, as nearly as can be computed, according to what is usually the original expense of improvement, and the annual expense of cultivation

    21. Tobacco might be cultivated with advantage through the greater part of Europe ; but, in almost every part of Europe, it has become a principal subject of taxation ; and to collect a tax from every different farm in the country where this plant might happen to be cultivated, would be more difficult, it has been supposed, than to levy one upon its importation at the custom-house


    22. I have never even heard of any tobacco plantation that was improved and cultivated by the capital of merchants who resided in Great Britain; and our tobacco colonies send us home no such wealthy planters as we see frequently arrive from our sugar islands


    23. Except in particular situations, therefore, the rent of corn land regulates in Europe that of all other cultivated land


    24. An acre of potatoes is cultivated with less expense than an acre of wheat; the fallow, which generally precedes the sowing of wheat, more than compensating the hoeing and other extraordinary culture which is always given to potatoes


    25. Should this root ever become in any part of Europe, like rice in some rice countries, the common and favourite vegetable food of the people, so as to occupy the same proportion of the lands in tillage, which wheat and other sorts of grain for human food do at present, the same quantity of cultivated land would maintain a much greater number of people ; and the labourers being generally fed with potatoes, a greater surplus would remain after replacing all the stock, and maintaining all the labour employed in cultivation


    26. In countries not better cultivated than England was then, or than the Highlands of Scotland are now, and which had no foreign commerce, the materials of clothing would evidently be so superabundant, that a great part of them would be thrown away as useless, and no part could afford any rent to the landlord


    27. Upon the sea-coast of a well-improved country, indeed, if coals can conveniently be had for fuel, it may sometimes be cheaper to bring barren timber for building from less cultivated foreign countries than to raise it at home


    28. Those who cultivated the ground, were obliged to build their own houses, to make their own household furniture, their own clothes, shoes, and instruments of agriculture


    29. The famines which they are said to have occasioned almost wherever they went, in countries, too, which at the same time are represented as very populous and well cultivated, sufficiently demonstrate that the story of this populousness and high cultivation is in a great measure fabulous


    30. Their real value, therefore, the real quantity of labour which they will purchase or command, gradually rises, till at last it gets so high as to render them as profitable a produce as any thing else which human industry can raise upon the most fertile and best cultivated land

    31. The price of butcher's meat, therefore, and, consequently, of cattle, must gradually rise, till it gets so high, that it becomes as profitable to employ the most fertile and best cultivated lands in raising food for them as in raising corn


    32. Till the price of cattle, indeed, has got to this height, it seems scarce possible that the greater part, even of those lands which are capable of the highest cultivation, can be completely cultivated


    33. In all farms too distant from any town to carry manure from it, that is, in the far greater part of those of every extensive country, the quantity of well cultivated land must be in proportion to the quantity of manure which the farm itself produces ; and this, again, must be in proportion to the stock of cattle which are maintained upon it


    34. But unless the price of the cattle be sufficient to pay both the rent and profit of cultivated land, the farmer cannot afford to pasture them upon it ; and he can still less afford to feed them in the stable


    35. It is with the produce of improved and cultivated land only that cattle can be fed in the stable; because, to collect the scanty and scattered produce of waste and unimproved lands, would require too much labour, and be too expensive


    36. The rest were never manured, but a certain portion of them was in its turn, notwithstanding, regularly cultivated and exhausted


    37. It must be a long time after the first establishment of such colonies, before it can become profitable to feed cattle upon the produce of cultivated land


    38. But in countries ill cultivated, and therefore but thinly inhabited, the poultry, which are thus raised without expense, are often fully sufficient to supply the whole demand


    39. Sooner or later, however, in the progress of improvement, it must at any rate have risen to the utmost height to which it is capable of rising ; or to the price which pays the labour and expense of cultivating the land which furnishes them with food, as well as these are paid upon the greater part of other cultivated land


    40. The price at last gets so high, that it becomes worth while to employ some of the most fertile and best cultivated lands in feeding cattle merely for the purpose of the dairy ; and when it has got to this height, it cannot well go higher

    41. In countries ill cultivated, and therefore but thinly inhabited, the price of the wool and the hide bears always a much greater proportion to that of the whole beast, than in countries where, improvement and population being further advanced, there is more demand for butcher's meat


    42. Whatever regulations tend to sink the price, either of wool or of raw hides, below what it naturally would he, must, in an improved and cultivated country, have some tendency to raise the price of butcher's meat


    43. The price both of the great and small cattle, which are fed on improved and cultivated land, must be sufficient to pay the rent which the landlord, and the profit which the farmer, has reason to expect from improved and cultivated land


    44. In an improved and cultivated country, therefore, their interest as landlords and farmers cannot be much affected by such regulations, though their interest as consumers may, by the rise in the price of provisions


    45. So is turned into matter the idea that is sustained and cultivated


    46. Land even replaces, in part at least, the capitals with which fisheries and mines are cultivated


    47. The Greeks have cultivated


    48. When we compare, therefore, the state of a nation at two different periods, and find that the annual produce of its land and labour is evidently greater at the latter than at the former, that its lands are better cultivated, its manufactures more numerous and more flourishing, and its trade more extensive; we may be assured that its capital must have increased during the interval between those two periods, and that more must have been added to it by the good conduct of some, than had been taken from it either by the private misconduct of others, or by the public extravagance of government


    49. More houses would have been built, more lands would have been improved, and those which had been improved before would have been better cultivated; more manufactures would have been established, and those which had been established before would have been more extended ; and to what height the real wealth and revenue of the country might by this time have been raised, it is not perhaps very easy even to imagine


    50. A field overgrown with briars and brambles, may frequently produce as great a quantity of vegetables as the best cultivated vineyard or corn field














































    1. A gardener who cultivates his own garden with his own hands, unites in his own person the three different characters, of landlord, farmer, and labourer


    2. He feels that an artificer is the servant of his customers, from whom he derives his subsistence; but that a planter who cultivates his own land, and derives his necessary subsistence from the labour of his own family, is really a master, and independent of all the world


    3. When the proprietor cultivates his own lands, they are valued according to an equitable estimation, and he is allowed a deduction of one-fifth of the tax; so that for such land he pays only eight instead of ten per cent


    4. Stock cultivates land ; stock employs labour


    5. At best, planned intelligence may imitate the various forms or likeness however not the sameness of human intelligence that cultivates its own rational manners by inherent rather than exterior designs


    6. True practitioners in live sit, in every line, in the eye, ear, nose tongue body is selected, to be able to accumulate cultivate its own energy, integrity, cultivates the solid element, stimulate their own potential


    7. cultivates Falun Dafa to donate blood, should it?" Mr


    8. How high a person cultivates is up to the person himself


    9. Of a truth, God is surely organized, but not in the way man thinks, we see through a glass that is darkened, and He nurtures those that are led as the Holy Spirit cultivates His people thru the trials and temptations of life


    10. identifies those who can help him and cultivates them with all his

    11. And compounding their misery is their penchant to rear more children than their means would will, and that either forces them to reduce their progeny into child labor or consign them to the madrasa education, which only cultivates the fundamentalist mindset that is inimical to their economic wellbeing


    12. Let me remind all of you one more time that both the “length of existence” of the focused-by-You NUU-VVU-Form and the length of your Life depend on the intensity and quality of this most important process — the Process of Choice: spiritually deprived and more egoistic choices provide you with fewer possibilities; if you focus on the spiritual development that cultivates stable, altruistic tendencies in your Self-Consciousness and enriches all of your Conceptions of the World and of Yourself, you will automatically (subconsciously) reproject Yourself into Worlds with higher-quality Stereo-Doubles whose development scenarios are also longer


    13. html says most feel if a farmer cultivates a breeding ground for cows that these cows are born only because he cultivated them


    14. wrong, and a person just sits and cultivates this state


    15. ' The next greatest poet of modern times, Goethe, is concerned with 'a lower degree of truth'; he paints the world as a stage on which 'all the men and women are merely players'; he cultivates life as an art, but he furnishes no ideals of truth and action


    16. Nor yet by reason of a knowledge which cultivates the earth; that would give the city the name of agricultural?


    17. He is an honorable idler who lounges, who practises country jaunts, who cultivates the grisette, who pays court to the fair sex, who is at this very moment, perhaps, with my mistress


    18. No matter with what sincerity the Administration cultivates peace, the opposition will insist that it alone is culpable for any breach between the two countries


    19. It is curious that, throughout this whole debate, there seems to have been drawn a distinction between the rights of a man who cultivates the soil, and of him who follows the sea, and that this distinction should have been drawn by those who claim to be the champions of commerce and of a navy, and who have told us that agriculture and commerce were inseparable


    1. radiance in the energy that you are cultivating around yourself


    2. Universe simply for cultivating more of this high vibrational


    3. But these can never afford manure enough for keeping constantly in good condition all the lands which they are capable of cultivating


    4. In the progress of improvements, the period at which every particular sort of animal food is dearest, must naturally be that which immediately precedes the general practice of cultivating land for the sake of raising it


    5. Sooner or later, however, in the progress of improvement, it must at any rate have risen to the utmost height to which it is capable of rising ; or to the price which pays the labour and expense of cultivating the land which furnishes them with food, as well as these are paid upon the greater part of other cultivated land


    6. An improved farm is equally advantageous and more durable than any of those machines, frequently requiring no other repairs than the most profitable application of the farmer's capital employed in cultivating it


    7. The capital, therefore, annually employed in cultivating this land, and in maintaining this labour, must likewise be much greater


    8. The proprietor furnished them with the seed, cattle, and instruments of husbandry, the whole stock, in short, necessary for cultivating the farm


    9. withstanding the complaints of depopulation, reduced to the number necessary for cultivating it, according to the imperfect state of cultivation and improvement in those times


    10. A small proprietor, however, who knows every part of his little territory, views it with all the affection which property, especially small property, naturally inspires, and who upon that account takes pleasure, not only in cultivating, but in adorning it, is generally of all improvers the most industrious, the most intelligent, and the most successful

    11. The science of the arts has been cultivating the mind for thousands and thousands of years


    12. Their real wealth, their real revenue, therefore, would be the same as at present, though it might be expressed by a smaller quantity of silver, and they would neither be disabled nor discouraged from cultivating corn as much as they do at present


    13. The increase of revenue which the proprietor, who is always the undertaker, expects from their improvement, constitutes his profit, which, in these circumstances, is commonly very great; but this great profit cannot be made, without employing the labour of other people in clearing and cultivating the land; and the disproportion between the great extent of the land and the small number of the people, which commonly takes place in new colonies, makes it difficult for him to get this labour


    14. The colony law, which imposes upon every proprietor the obligation of improving and cultivating, within a limited time, a certain proportion of his lands, and which, in case of failure, declares those neglected lands grantable to any other person; though it has not perhaps been very strictly executed, has, however, had some effect


    15. fruquently, too, by cultivating all those arts which best deserve, and which are therefore most likely to gain them, the esteem of people of rank and fortune; by their knowledge in all the different branches of useful and ornamental learning, by the decent liberality of their manners, by the social good humour of their conversation, and by their avowed contempt of those absurd and hypocritical austerities which fanatics inculcate and pretend to practise, in order to draw upon themselves the veneration, and upon the greater part of men of rank and fortune, who avow that they do not practise them, the abhorrence of the common people


    16. substitute for cultivating a relationship with the Holy


    17. The strictest regards for the rights of neutrals cannot be too sedulously observed; nor should an opportunity be lost in cultivating friendly relations with their naval and merchant services, and of placing the true character of the contest in which we are engaged in its proper light


    18. Unhappy is the fate of one who tries to win his battles and succeed in his attacks without cultivating the spirit of enterprise; for the result is waste of time and general stagnation


    19. Cultivating good eating habits is best done by sharing those habits with your children


    20. My husband became absorbed in cultivating his expertise in aspects of fishing different from what he’d known in South Africa

    21. While it seemed to me it should be midwinter, the people were cultivating their fields of mature crops as though it were midsummer


    22. If a moment of anger arises in the mind and we get lost in it, we are then actually cultivating anger


    23. If we get lost in greed, we are cultivating greed


    24. Using the SourcePoint Practice will help create a shift in perception and way of life by cultivating the enlightened qualities of the heart


    25. cultivating a good seed that made their rice superior to others, although he did have to


    26. lose sight of cultivating a relationship with Him as


    27. ►Pray that cultivating intimacy with God remains


    28. Instead of cultivating a responsible self, students are taught to diminish themselves into “citizens of the world” before they can realize that a citizen of everywhere is a citizen of nowhere


    29. We have been cultivating the ego for quite some time


    30. It is nice to consider the concept of possessing truth, and employing it, and cultivating it

    31. Cultivating compassion means seeing people as individuals with needs and concerns and weaknesses of


    32. emotions that are working against you, cultivating nothing more


    33. Of cultivating talent


    34. so, and with my feelings cultivating about having children I


    35. cultivating diseases to be used as weapons


    36. The trick is to start cultivating that sense of discipline - that small voice which nags away at you


    37. Notice that the weapons of war are turned into tools for farming and cultivating - that is, for growing and tilling the soil


    38. Relationships are like cultivating a garden


    39. And that did the trick for all time to come as they went about cultivating materialism in the fertile minds of the white man


    40. Surrounded by the voracity of nature, Aureliano and Amaranta Úrsula continued cultivating the oregano and the begonias and defended their world with demarcations of quicklime, building the last trenches in the age-old war between man and ant

    41. Li Chunxiang, a practitioner in Tianjin, devoted herself to cultivating


    42. However, Li Hongzhi's words "Cultivating the heart, severing


    43. , Li Hongzhi said: "The ultimate goal of cultivating


    44. I really should write a healthy lifestyle book to explain all the ins and outs of healthy eating and living, but a simple solution to the obesity problem is simply cultivating and maintaining healthy eating habits and coupling that to regular exercise


    45. � Farah then spoke for a couple of minutes, explaining an idea she had been cultivating for a few days now


    46. You will be in charge of directing our food acquisition program and will be responsible for cultivating our relations with the various rulers in Europe and around the World


    47. No one learns to read and education is reserved for cultivating crops and riding reaping machines


    48. Françoise Vinier looked at a young man cultivating his field in a nearby lot, dressed only in his linen shirt


    49. He is invoked at ceremonies which take place several times yearly, at the times of the planting (April), cultivating (July), and harvesting (October) of the maize crop


    50. Forest had been cultivating for millennia



































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    Синонимы для "cultivate"

    cultivate domesticate naturalise naturalize tame crop work civilise civilize educate school train advance nurture encourage foster favour forward further