| 释义 | 
		Definition of grazier in English: graziernoun ˈɡreɪzɪəˈɡreɪʒər 1A person who rears or fattens cattle or sheep for market. 饲养牲畜(以供出售)者 Example sentencesExamples -  With their backs to the economic wall, many graziers are trying to survive by putting more livestock on the already depleted land.
 -  There were grazier communities like the Rabaris of Gujarat who moved long distances with their herds of cattle.
 -  However, most of the old rabbit fences have now fallen into disrepair as graziers and government scientists put their faith in calicivirus, the new biological control for rabbits which destroy vegetation.
 -  The demand for land focused hostile attention upon the graziers, who reared cattle and sheep commercially on extensive pastoral holdings.
 -  The ewes used at The National were loaned by a local grazier and some say they are a bit wild - made jumpy by frequent wild dog attacks in the highlands of Australia.
 -  It was a sheep grazier of Scottish descent, who saw the potential of camels for carrying goods on a commercial basis, particularly in the centre of Australia.
 -  He intended to keep things that way, repelling would-be graziers, firewood cutters and poachers with an iron hand.
 -  What a terrible way to go, starving to death in their millions,’ the Queensland grazier and kangaroo expert said.
 -  At the Brisbane boarding school he attended as a child he met many sons of Charleville graziers.
 -  Research conducted into the costs of shepherding on moorland showed that graziers were making a loss of £1.32 per hectare.
 -  Revenue in kind received by the grazier included animals and sheep products.
 -  Some graziers are planting paddocks with kale or turnips for winter forage in the North.
 -  These series of tours are even better than a pasture walk, he says, because it allows new graziers to see the growing process step by step, month by month, instead of just at the peak season.
 -  However, as more and more graziers opt for this market it too will become ‘saturated’ and diminished profits from over supply will eventuate.
 -  It may be worth receiving a lower rent and having a more reliable grazier who will keep the land in a tidy condition.
 
 - 1.1Australian, NZ  A large-scale sheep or cattle farmer.
Example sentencesExamples -  Many graziers in the area do trips everyday around the station to their waterholes, their dams and ground tanks.
 -  The recovery bill has reached half a billion dollars, and the February and July floods affected around 1,800 dairy farmers and graziers.
 -  Many programs depend on permission from local rural landholders, graziers and farmers for access to and through their properties.
 -  Entrepreneurs, graziers, farmers and professionals formed an elite, which dominated municipal politics and was generally hostile to the labour movement.
 -  The forum is aimed at young farmers, graziers and people in the wider agricultural industry in the Western Division.
 
  
 
 OriginMiddle English: from grass + -ier. RhymesAnastasia, aphasia, brazier, dysphasia, dysplasia, euthanasia, fantasia, Frazier, glazier, gymnasia, Malaysia    Definition of grazier in US English: graziernounˈɡrāZHərˈɡreɪʒər A person who rears or fattens cattle or sheep for market. 饲养牲畜(以供出售)者 Example sentencesExamples -  It may be worth receiving a lower rent and having a more reliable grazier who will keep the land in a tidy condition.
 -  It was a sheep grazier of Scottish descent, who saw the potential of camels for carrying goods on a commercial basis, particularly in the centre of Australia.
 -  There were grazier communities like the Rabaris of Gujarat who moved long distances with their herds of cattle.
 -  The demand for land focused hostile attention upon the graziers, who reared cattle and sheep commercially on extensive pastoral holdings.
 -  These series of tours are even better than a pasture walk, he says, because it allows new graziers to see the growing process step by step, month by month, instead of just at the peak season.
 -  What a terrible way to go, starving to death in their millions,’ the Queensland grazier and kangaroo expert said.
 -  However, as more and more graziers opt for this market it too will become ‘saturated’ and diminished profits from over supply will eventuate.
 -  Revenue in kind received by the grazier included animals and sheep products.
 -  Some graziers are planting paddocks with kale or turnips for winter forage in the North.
 -  However, most of the old rabbit fences have now fallen into disrepair as graziers and government scientists put their faith in calicivirus, the new biological control for rabbits which destroy vegetation.
 -  The ewes used at The National were loaned by a local grazier and some say they are a bit wild - made jumpy by frequent wild dog attacks in the highlands of Australia.
 -  With their backs to the economic wall, many graziers are trying to survive by putting more livestock on the already depleted land.
 -  Research conducted into the costs of shepherding on moorland showed that graziers were making a loss of £1.32 per hectare.
 -  At the Brisbane boarding school he attended as a child he met many sons of Charleville graziers.
 -  He intended to keep things that way, repelling would-be graziers, firewood cutters and poachers with an iron hand.
 
 
 OriginMiddle English: from grass + -ier.     |