fertile land in English
fruitful land, fruitful soil, land in which produces good crops
Use "fertile land" in a sentence
1. The desert continually encroaches on the fertile land.
2. 14 The desert continually encroaches on the fertile land.
3. White symbolizes purity, and green is for the fertile land.
4. Aeons ago, there were deserts where there is now fertile land.
5. The village is surrounded by fertile land where local people practice agriculture.
6. The fertile land supports crops of pineapples, corn, coffee, rice, and bananas.
7. They used force to banish the natives from the more fertile land.
8. Irrigation accelerated these salt movements and has degraded much of the fertile land in Australia.
9. They are not concerned with particular local food requirements and they usually control the most fertile land for cash cropping.
10. In 17th century literature, it was identified as a festival that celebrated agriculture, commemorated good spring harvests and the fertile land.
11. In that case, the dancers could here represent the fertile land, with the acanthus symbolising their role in the creation of vegetation.
12. HEART OF THE BLUE RIDGE WALDRON BAILY The Helvetii, Coveting the fertile land that lay beside theirs, decided to attempt its conquest
13. Fertile land is the state's most important natural resource, and efforts have been made to increase the amount of arable land through irrigation projects.
14. Because in many cases, the plantations own the most fertile land (which was most often acquired unscrupulously) and the local people won't survive from subsistence farming alone.
15. The Cajuns sold the fertile land along the Mississippi River and pushed westward, to modern south-central Louisiana, where they could settle the land for no cost
16. The Māori call Auckland Tāmaki Makaurau — a maiden desired by 100 lovers, and a valuable territory fought over for centuries for its fertile land and natural harbours on the Pacific Ocean (to the east) and Tasman Sea (to the west)
17. Belau (formerly Palau), a group of more than 200 mostly uninhabited tropical islands seems to have many of the ingredients of Paradise: a temperature that rarely strays far from 80 degrees Fahrenheit (27° C.), fertile land, an abundantly stocked ocean, industrious, friendly inhabitants —and situated far, far away from those centers of international tension, Washington and Moscow.