tenant farmer
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A tenant farmer is a person who cultivates farmland that is rented from a landowner. The tenant farmer typically pays rent, which can be a fixed cash amount or a share of the crops produced, in exchange for the right to use the land for agricultural purposes.
Usage
The term is used to describe the specific agricultural and economic relationship between the farmer working the land and the individual or entity that owns it. - The tenant farmer paid the landlord a portion of the harvest as rent. - Many tenant farmers struggled to earn a profit after paying their annual rent.
Advanced Usage
- Historical Context: In systems like sharecropping, a tenant farmer pays rent with a share of the crop, which can create cycles of debt.
- Legal/Economic Status: A tenant farmer has possession of the land but not ownership, distinguishing them from a landowner or a farm laborer.
Variants and Related Words
- Tenancy (n): The condition of being a tenant; the possession or use of land or property under a lease.
- Tenant (n): A person who occupies land or property rented from a landlord. (Tenant farmer is a specific type of tenant.)
- Sharecropper (n): A tenant farmer who pays as rent a share of the crop. (This is a specific, often historically significant, type of tenant farmer.)
Synonyms
- Leaseholder (specifically for land)
- Renter (of farmland)
Antonyms
- Landowner
- Freeholder
- Proprietor
Related Phrases/Compounds
- Tenant farming (n): The system or practice of cultivating rented land.
- The region's economy was long based on tenant farming.
Noun
- a farmer who works land owned by someone else