agrarian

[uh-grair-ee-uhn] Origin

a·grar·i·an

[uh-grair-ee-uhn]
adjective
1.
relating to land, land tenure, or the division of landed property: agrarian laws.
2.
pertaining to the advancement of agricultural groups: an agrarian movement.
3.
composed of or pertaining to farmers: an agrarian co-op.
4.
rural; agricultural.
5.
growing in fields; wild: an agrarian plant.
noun
6.
a person who favors the equal division of landed property and the advancement of agricultural groups.

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Agrarian is an SAT word you need to know.
So is despot. Does it mean:
a professed believer who maintains religious opinions contrary to those accepted by his or her church or rejects doctrines prescribed by that church.
a king or other ruler with absolute, unlimited power, or any tyrant or oppressor

Origin:
1610–20; < Latin agrāri(us) (agr- stem of ager field, acre + -ārius -ary) + -an; compare agrestal

a·grar·i·an·ly, adverb
non·a·grar·i·an, adjective, noun
pro·a·grar·i·an, adjective
su·per·a·grar·i·an, adjective
un·a·grar·i·an, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2012.
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World English Dictionary
agrarian (əˈɡrɛərɪən)
 
adj
1.  of or relating to land or its cultivation or to systems of dividing landed property
2.  of or relating to rural or agricultural matters
 
n
3.  a person who favours the redistribution of landed property
 
[C16: from Latin agrārius, from ager field, land]
 
a'grarianism
 
n

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 10th Edition
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Etymonline
Word Origin & History

agrarian
1610s, "relating to the land," from M.Fr. loy agrarienne "agrarian law," from L. Lex agraria, the Roman law for the division of conquered lands, from agrarius "of the land," from ager (gen. agri) "a field," from PIE *agros (cf. Gk. agros "field," Goth. akrs, O.E. æcer "field;" see
EXPAND
acre). Meaning "having to do with cultivated land" first recorded 1792.
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