As an adjective:
"The farmer finally wanted to plant seeds in his fallow land."
As a noun:
"The fallow was littered with ravens."
Fallow is a word meaning unsown, and as such does not change the meaning of a word when added to the beginning of it. It is not a prefix.
Example sentence - We used a stick to prop the fence up while we repaired it.
No, "ACE wrapping" is not typically capitalized when used in a sentence unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title.
Adverbs can be used at the beginning, middle, or the end of a sentence.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
fallow - inactive/not in use In this sentence, my literary skills were fallow. :)
I can give you several sentences.The fallow fields need to be plowed for next season.Leave one field fallow and plant the rest.A fallow field is "resting" from being harvested.
The field was lying fallow this year.
The fields lay fallow in the winter.
After the farm failed, the land laid fallow for years.
The fields, denuded of all vegetation, were allowed to lie fallow for some years.
he or she should always fallow the guidelines in the town.
it is called fallow,as in fallow land .not used,or for a period of time.
more fallow, most fallow
Thanks to drought, much of California's arable land currently lies fallow.
inactive land can be fallow
Fallow is a word meaning unsown, and as such does not change the meaning of a word when added to the beginning of it. It is not a prefix.