Similar words: subsist, consistent, consistently, sister, listen, distend, listen to, listener. Meaning: [səb'sɪstəns] n. 1. minimal (or marginal) resources for subsisting 2. a means of surviving 3. the state of existing in reality; having substance.
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61) Fishing is also of major importance, while around 70 percent of the population depend on subsistence agriculture.
62) Did it do no more than keep a subsistence economy running?
63) A 100% tax rate is assumed to discourage all output, except that for subsistence, again yielding zero tax revenue.
64) In the early l960s Bengali agriculture consisted mainly of subsistence farming.
65) From this time on the position of subsistence agriculture declined in other regions, though the pace of this change was uneven.
66) There was a clear and apparently enduring margin over mere subsistence.
67) Parties and witnesses are entitled to allowances for loss of earnings,(Sentencedict.com) subsistence and travel to and from the tribunal.
68) Genuine land reform is not about breaking up highly productive commercial farms into little plots for subsistence farmers.
69) It was there in 1903 that quarrymen went on strike for three and a half years, surviving on subsistence farming.
70) What was the cost of basic subsistence in the first part of the eighteenth century?
71) Crop husbandry was limited to basic subsistence and animal feed.
72) Now this basic means of subsistence for between 50,000 and 100,000 urban migrants has been outlawed.
73) Students obliged to meet these requirements will have their travel and any additional subsistence expenses reimbursed by the University in accordance with agreed scales.
74) Hunting and gathering is a subsistence economy which means that production only meets basic survival needs.
75) As agriculture developed, surplus wealth, that is goods above the basic subsistence needs of the community, was produced.
76) In an era of fast food, subsistence incomes don't make for a culinary culture.
77) From about 1690 agricultural productivity declined, and conditions were aggravated by the effects of war and recurrent subsistence crises.
78) The aim was to transform them into permanent subsistence farmers or labourers.
79) In its purest form, the doctrine advocated a return to subsistence economy but on a less individualistic and more communal basis.
80) The ancient subsistence economy of the villages lasted a long time.
81) If overtime is not paid subsistence can be claimed at own base.
82) Subsistence economies sometimes achieve a low-grade stability by the very poverty of the general standard of living.
83) Most people have considerable leeway as to how they spend their money over and above basic subsistence requirements.
84) Preferential interest rates also favor commercial over subsistence farming in many countries.
85) The graphite boom temporarily reduced the social and economic importance of subsistence agriculture in the Low Country.
86) They consist of: £29 a day subsistence allowance to cover meals, taxis and other incidentals.
87) Classes emerge when the productive capacity of society expands beyond the level required for subsistence.
88) The siting of a settlement is very closely connected with the decision to use the land around for subsistence agriculture.
89) Accordingly, its method of subsistence was to develop immunity to the blights and plagues visiting other kinds of trees.
90) When accompanied by minimum subsistence pensions, as in Britain, retirement means economic dependency.
More similar words: subsist, consistent, consistently, sister, listen, distend, listen to, listener, assistance, resistance, sentence, distention, glistening, penitence, sustenance, subside, subsidy, substance, insist, assist, persist, resist, desist, consist, assist in, consist in, assistant, consist of, tendency, fence.