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Word Meanings - INCULTURE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Want or neglect of cultivation or culture. Feltham.

Related words: (words related to INCULTURE)

  • CULTURE FEATURES
    The artificial features of a district as distinguished from the natural.
  • CULTURED
    1. Under culture; cultivated. "Cultured vales." Shenstone. 2. Characterized by mental and moral training; disciplined; refined; well-educated. The sense of beauty in nature, even among cultured people, is less often met with than other
  • CULTURE MYTH
    A myth accounting for the discovery of arts and sciences or the advent of a higher civilization, as in the Prometheus myth.
  • NEGLECTION
    The state of being negligent; negligence. Shak.
  • NEGLECTFUL
    Full of neglect; heedless; careless; negligent; inattentive; indifferent. Pope. A cold and neglectful countenance. Locke. Though the Romans had no great genius for trade, yet they were not entirely neglectful of it. Arbuthnot. -- Neg*lect"ful*ly,
  • CULTURELESS
    Having no culture.
  • NEGLECTEDNESS
    The state of being neglected.
  • NEGLECTER
    One who neglects. South.
  • NEGLECT
    disregard, neglect, the literal sense prob. neing, not to pick up; nec not, nor (fr. ne not + -que, a particle akin to Goth. -h, -uh, and prob. to E. who; cf. Goth. nih nor) + L. legere to pick up, 1. Not to attend to with due care or attention;
  • NEGLECTINGLY
    Carelessly; heedlessly. Shak.
  • NEGLECTIVE
    Neglectful. "Neglective of their own children." Fuller.
  • CULTIVATION
    1. The art or act of cultivating; improvement for agricultural purposes or by agricultural processes; tillage; production by tillage. 2. Bestowal of time or attention for self-improvement or for the benefit of others; fostering care. 3. The state
  • CULTURE
    1. The act or practice of cultivating, or of preparing the earth for seed and raising crops by tillage; as, the culture of the soil. 2. The act of, or any labor or means employed for, training, disciplining, or refining the moral and intellectual
  • SELF-CULTURE
    Culture, training, or education of one's self by one's own efforts.
  • SILVICULTURE
    See SYLVICULTURE
  • OSTREACULTURE
    The artificial cultivation of oysters.
  • FLORICULTURE
    The cultivation of flowering plants.
  • SELF-NEGLECTING
    A neglecting of one's self, or of one's own interests. Self-love, my liege, is not so vile a sin As self-neglecting. Shak.
  • DOMICULTURE
    The art of house-keeping, cookery, etc. R. Park.
  • AGRICULTURE
    The art or science of cultivating the ground, including the harvesting of crops, and the rearing and management of live stock; tillage; husbandry; farming.
  • VITICULTURE
    The cultivation of the vine; grape growing.
  • STIRPICULTURE
    The breeding of special stocks or races.
  • INCULTURE
    Want or neglect of cultivation or culture. Feltham.
  • UNCULTURE
    Want of culture. "Idleness, ill husbandry . . . unculture." Bp. Hall.
  • ARBORICULTURE
    The cultivation of trees and shrubs, chiefly for timber or for ornamental purposes.
  • PISCICULTURE
    Fish culture. See under Fish.
  • POMICULTURE
    The culture of fruit; pomology as an art.
  • APICULTURE
    Rearing of bees for their honey and wax.

 

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