The production of crops for sale or intended for widespread distribution to wholesalers or retail outlets (e.g. supermarkets). In commercial farming wheat, maize (or corn), soybeans, tea, coffee, sugarcane, cashews, rubber, bananas, cotton or any of a number of other crops are harvested in large quantities. Commercial agriculture includes livestock production and livestock grazing. Commercial agriculture does not include crops grown for household consumption (e.g. backyard garden or from a vegetable garden or a few fruit trees.)
Agriculture would never develop if agriculture never developed.
Farmers wouldn't be farmers without agriculture, and agriculture wouldn't be agriculture without farmers. Simple as that.
Tom Vilsack is the head of agriculture
Agriculture 40% of the people work in Agriculture but they only use about 4% for the land
Livestock, fruits and vegetables are all US Agriculture
commercialised
Yes Christmas has been too commercialised because most of the adverts advertise toys not talk about our saviour Jesus Christ and all you here on the radio come and buy your gifts and see Father Christmas at Springfield.
Only that commercialised glue originates with experimental glue.
The man that created the PlayStation 2 is Ken Kutaragi, the father of the PlayStation. It was then commercialised by Sony Computer Entertainment.
Los Angeles (1984) and Atlanta (1996). Both tasteless and over-commercialised. Can anyone spot the common factor?
Overproduction
There are nine types of agriculture in India. Shifting agriculture, subsistence farming, intensive agriculture, extensive agriculture, commercial agriculture, plantation agriculture, mixed farming, monoculture, and dry farming.
agriculture in Egypt
No, geography is geography and agriculture is agriculture.
There is no " gothic" agriculture. Agriculture is farming and plants.
Agriculture would never develop if agriculture never developed.
the three types of agriculture are: -agriculture of substance -commercialized agriculture -specialised agriculture (I'm translating from french, so it might not be the exact pronounciation.)