homesteader

[ US /ˈhoʊmstɛdɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who settles lawfully on government land with the intent to acquire title to it
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How To Use homesteader In A Sentence

  • The agile flea is another "homesteader," and if marked, its favorite resting-place on a dog or cat can easily be determined. The Dawn of Reason or, Mental Traits in the Lower Animals
  • This story sounds suspiciously like a tale based on the 1889 vigilante hanging of the homesteader Jim Averell and nearby Ella Watson, the latter believed to have traded sexual favors to cowboys in return for mavericks. Bird Cloud
  • In the 1800s, thousands of homesteaders settled on the prairies of the western US.
  • Indeed, from hangmen, Copper Kings, scientists, and artists to hoboes, harlots, and homesteaders, we enjoyed Montana and western history in all its varied aspects.
  • Sheep and cattle, introduced by homesteaders, munched the grasses that fueled periodic fires.
  • But Levitt was still building "planned communities" -- he wasn't building "planned tranches of securitized regional mortgage pools." homesteader "movement, all one needed to establish ownership of property was to mix one's labor with the land. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • The new young homesteaders had a real interest in revitalizing agriculture.
  • For the urban homesteader (and the backyard recycler) home brewing is quite the scavenge-and celebrate hobby. Jenna Woginrich: Green Beer: Homebrewing
  • For the urban homesteader (and the backyard recycler) home brewing is quite the scavenge-and celebrate hobby. Jenna Woginrich: Green Beer: Homebrewing
  • The U.S. federal government offered 160 acres of land for homesteaders on the harsh fringe of the American breadbasket, where blizzards rule the winter and drought haunts the summer.
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