to leave land uncultivated

  • 71Bethsaida — (/IPA|bɛθ.seɪ i.da/; Βηθσαΐδά, Bēthsaidá, Bet shayid “house of fishing”) Bethsaida Julias A city east of the Jordan River, in a “desert place” (that is, uncultivated ground used for grazing) possibly the site at which Jesus miraculously fed the… …

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  • 72Meah Shearim — Meah Shearim, ( he. מאה שערים), is one of the oldest neighborhoods in west Jerusalem, Israel, built by the original settlers of Yishuv haYashan and even today populated mainly by Haredi Jews. EtymologyThe name Mea Shearim is derived from a verse… …

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  • 73Czech American — Čechoameričané …

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  • 74bush — I. /bʊʃ / (say boosh) noun 1. a woody plant, especially a low one, with many branches which usually arise from or near the ground. 2. Botany a small cluster of shrubs appearing as a single plant. 3. something resembling or suggesting a bush, as a …

  • 75Claremont, Cape Town — Claremont   Suburb   Aerial view of the Claremont Central business district …

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  • 76History of the Jews in Laupheim — The History of the Jews in Laupheim began in the first half of the 18th century. Until the second half of the 19th century, the Jewish community in Laupheim expanded continuously to become the largest of its kind in Württemberg. During this… …

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  • 77Tobyhanna (village) — Geobox Village name = The Village of Tobyhanna native name = other name = other name1 = category = image caption = Tobyhanna Station etymology = American Indian for a stream whose banks are fringed with alder nickname = motto = Its really not… …

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  • 78natural — naturalness, n. /nach euhr euhl, nach reuhl/, adj. 1. existing in or formed by nature (opposed to artificial): a natural bridge. 2. based on the state of things in nature; constituted by nature: Growth is a natural process. 3. of or pertaining to …

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  • 79Gladsmuir —    GLADSMUIR, a parish, in the county of Haddington, 3½ miles (E. by N.) from Tranent; containing, with the villages of Samuelston, Long Niddry, and Penston, 1699 inhabitants. This place, which was anciently a wide uncultivated moor, is supposed… …

    A Topographical dictionary of Scotland