Difference between Unbroken and Fallow

What is the difference between Unbroken and Fallow?

Unbroken as an adjective is whole, not divided into parts. while Fallow as an adjective is ploughed but left unseeded for more than one planting season.

Unbroken

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: Whole, not divided into parts. Describing a horse that has not been tamed. Continuous, without interruption.

Example sentence: One thus sees that a new kind of theory is needed which drops these basic commitments and at most recovers some essential features of the older theories as abstract forms derived from a deeper reality in which what prevails in unbroken wholeness.

Fallow

Part of speech: noun

Definition: Ground ploughed and harrowed but left unseeded for one year.Uncultivated land.An area of fallow land.

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: Ploughed but left unseeded for more than one planting season.Inactive; undeveloped.A pale red or yellow, light brown; dun.

Part of speech: verb

Definition: To make land fallow for agricultural purposes.

Example sentence: I've never felt fallow in the sense that there's been no work.

We hope you now know whether to use Unbroken or Fallow in your sentence.

Also read

Popular Articles