pig farm

English

Alternative forms

Noun

pig farm (plural pig farms)

  1. (agriculture) A farm where domestic pigs are raised and bred, primarily for food and, sometimes, for their skin.
    Synonym: hog farm
    • 1977, David Young, “The Names of a Hare in English: Les noms de un levre en englais”, in Poetry[1], volume 131, number 2, page 84 of 78-87:
      The dogs were barking over at the pigfarm,
      the leaftruck was crawling through autumn,
      lovers were unbuttoning in cellars
      and what was I up to in that badlit attic?
    • 2006 October 1, Rita Corbin, “Love Is the Only Solution”, in The Catholic Worker[2], volume LXXIII, number 6, page 3b:
      He reminds me of a soldier I met in Cuba, who sat next to me in the station wagon which took a group of us on tour through a big school for children in Oriente Province. I was not too interested in the pig farm which we were being shown, and stayed in the car to rest, and he remained with me. Like all Cubans, he carried a book on Marxism-Leninism, and when I asked to see it and tried to read the Spanish, he shared it with me, and we read together, much as I read with the Polish pushcart man.
    • 2014 October 1, Veera Gnaneswar Gude, Benjamin S. Magbanua, Dennis D. Truax, “Natural Treatment and Onsite Processes”, in Water Environment Research[3], volume 86, number 10, page 1228 of 1217–1249:
      High removal efficiencies of 94% and 98% were achieved for pharmaceutical compounds enrofloxacin (ENR, a fluoroquinolone) and tetracycline (TET, tetracyclines family) respectively in constructed wetlands treating pigfarm wastewater effluent doped at 100 μg/L drug level, along twelve weeks indicating adsorption to be the predominant mechanism for ENR, although for TET, there were signs of degradation (Carvalho et al., 2013).

Derived terms