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sodbuster

American  
[sod-buhs-ter] / ˈsɒdˌbʌs tər /

noun

  1. a farmer who works the soil.


Etymology

Origin of sodbuster

First recorded in 1885–90; sod 1 + buster

Explanation

Someone who works the land, planting vegetables in the spring and harvesting them in the fall, is a sodbuster. When city life gets overwhelming, you may dream of moving west to be a sodbuster. This old-fashioned term for a farmer was coined in the U.S. around 1897, when it specifically referred to a pioneer working on Western land. It comes from the sense of "busting" the earth, digging and turning it over before planting. A 19th-century John Deere plow shared the name. In the 1980s, a federal agriculture program called Sodbuster had the opposite meaning: it discouraged plowing land that was prone to erosion.

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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Amiable Bob Bergland, 48, a three-term Congressman from northern Minnesota, is an authentic sodbuster who knows the ups and downs of farming at first hand.

From Time Magazine Archive

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