A very large farm is sometimes also called a ranch.
A farm is a piece of land used to produce useful plants or animals. Generally this is for food or clothing, but tobacco, for example, would also qualify, so there are other purposes. It might still be called a farm even if it no longer is used for that, as long as it could still be brought back into such use. Generally, it is also the business entity which is selling those plants or animals, but subsistence farms have no associated business, but are still a farm. If the piece of land is used primarily to raise herd animals, such as cows or sheep, it might be called a ranch, but that depends on the size. You would not call a very small farm raising cows a ranch.
A very large hill is called a mountain.
plantation
Yes. Ireland has a very large agricultural industry.
In some states, such as Montana, you can get your permit at 14 1/5 and license at 15. My Grandpmother had a "Farm License" in Colorado. At age 12 she could operate farm equipment, including registered vehicles, from ranch to ranch. Very limited use and that was 70 years ago.
No, a mouse is a rodent. It is considered a pest or vermin.
They had very large sheep for tugging at farm equipment, but their weakness was that they had flesh eating virisus making them very very ugly
"No Mas Cantina" is probably the name of a bar - "no more cantina" as in "you cannot have (any) more". "Hacienda" is a large (very large!) ranch or plantation
Yes, there are a quite a few veterinarians who work specifically on farms, and more than a few that work for just one farm (albeit, generally a very large farm).
In Greek mythology a very large humanoid monster is called a GIANT.
it's not.
Greece is a very mountainous place. The only large areas suitable for farming are in Thessaly and in central Macedonia.