Perikles |
March 10, 2010 07:39 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by irmamar
(Post 75706)
Now I was writing the definition of "orchard" as fruit or nut trees cultivated in an area of land. As I wanted to be sure, I've looked it up, and the dictionary said: an area on land on which fruit trees are grown.
Why the grass is in the field and the trees are on the land? :confused:
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Because there are visible boundaries to a field and to an orchard, these being usually walls or hedges. These define the enclosed area, and things are inside. Land in general is unbounded, so things grow on land.
There are trees in the orchard
There is grass in the meadow (I think in or on, because boundaries are unclear)
There are trees on the land. :)
This does not apply to a boundary being water because this is not a visible containing boundary: Tenerife is an island with lots of banana farms on it.
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