Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
interplanting
Danish translation:
udlægning
Added to glossary by
Barbara Østergaard
May 23, 2005 11:46
18 yrs ago
English term
interplanting
English to Danish
Other
Botany
"It's a good way to see the possibilities for succession planting (following one crop with another) and interplanting (planting a quick-maturing crop close to a slower-maturing one and harvesting the first before the two compete for space)."
Blot til info, så har jeg set det enkelte hit, Google giver - også "kompletteringsplatning" på Eurodicautom. Men jeg er ikke overbevist...
Blot til info, så har jeg set det enkelte hit, Google giver - også "kompletteringsplatning" på Eurodicautom. Men jeg er ikke overbevist...
Proposed translations
(Danish)
5 | udlæg {afgrøden}; udlægning {processen} | NetLynx |
4 | samdyrkning | Charlotte Langbeen |
4 | mellemplante // mellemplantning | Suzanne Blangsted (X) |
4 | udlægge/udlægsafgrøde | Orbital |
Proposed translations
9 hrs
Selected
udlæg {afgrøden}; udlægning {processen}
Substantivet. {'At så med udlæg'}
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Tak til jer alle..."
1 hr
samdyrkning
Mon ikke det dækker?
Peer comment(s):
neutral |
Suzanne Blangsted (X)
: I read than one previously when I did ag translation, but understood that this was the same type of crop and not several different types of plants.
3 hrs
|
1 hr
mellemplante // mellemplantning
L&H landbrugsordbog
Peer comment(s):
neutral |
Orbital
: If the book says so, I dont have it myself, but that word // Ahem, we were both wrong, the book "Planteproduktion" by Lotte Ipsen says it is at udlægge (page 81). Did a google to find exact spelling too (I hope).
2 hrs
|
Please give the answer that your boss called it. Dictionaries as time goes by need opdating. I have the latest one, but the author/editor might have missed something. I did see your answer but would like to see it documented. I can't find anything.
|
8 hrs
udlægge/udlægsafgrøde
Per conversation between me and Blangsted. Pretty much the agreed upon term. Reference is "Planteproduktion" by Lotte Ipsen, page 81.
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