fodder

పశుగ్రాసం
definition
verb
Irish livestock hauliers make use of staging posts to ensure that animals are rested, foddered and watered at regular intervals.
give fodder to (cattle or other livestock).
noun
The lower level is used to house livestock, fodder , food, and firewood, while the upper story holds the living quarters.
food, especially dried hay or feed, for cattle and other livestock.
translation of 'fodder'
మేత,
గోగ్రాసము
example
The trees inhibited the growth of 'fodder' for livestock, and many peasants destroyed or crippled the oaks in their fields.
So is all of this media attention just summertime 'fodder' for news-starved journalists?
This would also provide tremendous 'fodder' for analysis of the social networks implicit in links.
In a stilt house, the shed under the living floor serves as shelter for livestock and storage for 'fodder' .
Apple manipulates several narratives to continue to make its products interesting 'fodder' for journalists.
All that land has been occupied by this company and none of the crops which are grown on that land are useful as 'fodder' for livestock.
Either of these would make excellent narrative 'fodder' , but I fear exposure through specific disclosure and the spectre of losing my job.
The horse chestnut seed is poisonous to humans if eaten as a food, though the seeds are sometimes fed to horses and cattle as 'fodder' .
Wines produced on the shores of Lake Garda are often regarded as tourist 'fodder' by lovers of serious Italian rossi.
Of course, a Laloo or two might deal with straw meant as 'fodder' for cattle, but he is definitely no man of straw!
young people ending up as factory 'fodder'
The drying up of food, 'fodder' and feed will eventually affect milk production.
I offer this material as 'fodder' for lexicographers, along with some speculations about the development of innovative moreso/ more so.
The massive use of fertilizers and industrial 'fodder' for livestock also contributed to the increase in productivity per head.
A negotiating victory ‘over Europe’ would provide referendum 'fodder' for the most jingoistic elements of the media.
Will the paper - provisionally called The World - ever become more than 'fodder' for media columns?
young people ending up as factory 'fodder'
What better 'fodder' for movie makers or military strategists?
Since when had Jaws, the film that inaugurated the summer blockbuster, been regarded as cult 'fodder' ?
There's also a desperate need to help people have their livestock survive by getting 'fodder' to them.
A thoroughly good time was had by all, and the waiter will have therapy 'fodder' for years.
Maize and beet are widely grown in the Park by organic and non-organic farmers as livestock 'fodder' crops.
Also, she continues, weeds are 'fodder' for livestock and a large source of leafy greens in a rural family's diet.
In other words, it should provide and recycle everything it needs: livestock 'fodder' , fertilizer, and nutrients.
Vast acreages of soybeans are grown as 'fodder' for cattle and pigs.
Meanwhile, I am glad that I am 'fodder' for computational linguists.
One had only to turn elsewhere in the Times to find the kind of news that is 'fodder' for editorial writers.
While ‘love’ has been a favorite 'fodder' for poets and playwrights, scientific efforts have been less prolific.
There is more to one of Scotland's top comedians than reality-TV 'fodder' and tabloid headlines.
The lower level is used to house livestock, 'fodder' , food, and firewood, while the upper story holds the living quarters.
Credits: Google Translate