agri-, agrio- (Greek > Latin: fields)."Wild, savage; living in the fields" through Latin, ager, agri.agribusiness: 
1. The group of industries concerned with the processing and distribution of agricultural produce or with farm machinery and services.  
2. Agriculture conducted as a modern business, especially making use of advanced technology; a farm run in this way. agrichemical: 
A chemical used or produced in agriculture.
 
agricolation: 
Tillage of the ground; husbandry; the practice of agriculture. 
 
agricole: 
A husbandman; a rustic.
 
agriculture: 
The science and art of cultivating the soil; including the allied pursuits of gathering in the crops and rearing live stock; tillage, husbandry, farming (in the widest sense).
 
agriculturist: 
A student of the science of agriculture, (but soon extended to) a professed cultivator of the land, a farmer (for which agriculturalist, is also used).
 
agrimensorial: 
Of or pertaining to land surveying. 
 
agriologist: 
One who is versed in the history and customs of primitive or uncivilized peoples.
 
agriology: 
The comparative study of the history and customs of primitive, savage, or uncivilized people. Hence agriological.  
 
agriothymia: 
An obsolete term for a wild, ferocious mania. 
 
agrizoiatry: 
A branch of medicine specializing in wild animals.
 
pre-agricultural: In anthropology, that society of people who have not yet developed agriculture as a means of subsistence.
agria: 
agricere: 
agrichemistry: 
agricolist: 
agricolous: 
agricultor: 
agricultural: 
agriculturalist: 
agriculturally: 
agriculturer: 
agriculturism: 
agrimony: 
agrimotor: 
agrioecology: 
agriological: 
agriotype: 
agriproduct: 
agritech: 
agritechnology: 
agrizoiatrist: 
 |