English edit

Adjective edit

latifundiary (not comparable)

  1. Of or pertaining to latifundia.
    • 1976, Frank Safford, The Ideal of the Practical: Colombia's Struggle to Form a Technical Elite[1], University of Texas Press, page 33:
      The latifundiary regions of Boyacá contained high proportions of servants and vagrants, but so did neighboring Socorro, where land was not so much badly distributed as too scarce.
    • 1986, Gilberto Freyre, translated by Samuel Putnam, The Masters and the Slaves: A Study in the Development of Brazilian Civilization[2], University of California Press, page xlii:
      The Big House, although associated particularly with the sugar plantation and the patriarchal life of the northeast, is not to be looked upon as exclusively the result of sugar-raising, but rather as the effect of a slave-holding and latifundiary monoculture in general.
    • 1991, Henri Lefebvre, translated by Donald Nicholson-Smith, The Production of Space, Blackwell, page 252:
      The villa of a latifundiary landowner retained not a trace of the sacred.