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What is the noun for wheatlands?

What's the noun for wheatlands? Here's the word you're looking for.

wheatgrass
  1. Young grass of the common wheat plant, Triticum aestivum, used freshly juiced or dried into powder for animal and human consumption.
  2. A grass of the genus Agropyron, commonly known as crested-wheat grass.
  3. Examples:
    1. “Be sure to include less common foods, such as seaweed, green tea and wheatgrass for their potent and unique nutrient profiles.”
      “There is no evidence that raw food, much less wheatgrass enemas, have ANY health effects positive or negative.”
      “But it really was a devil of a job to get excited about food when the dernier cri was wheatgrass juice.”
wheat
  1. (countable) Any of several cereal grains, of the genus Triticum, that yields flour as used in bakery.
  2. (uncountable) A light brown colour, like that of wheat.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “Yesterday, I bought a bag of wheat from the grocery store to make homemade bread.”
wheatear
  1. An ear of wheat.
  2. A decorative pattern resembling an ear of wheat.
  3. Examples:
    1. “I've also noticed a black-eared wheatear that seems to favor the grassy area in front of our barracks.”
      “A wheatear with white eyebrow and orange bib perched nearby, robin shaped, hardly larger, soon to fly to Africa.”
      “Other species such as the wheatear, ring ouzel, and sandwich tern have all been observed about one week earlier than usual.”
wheatberry
  1. The entire wheat kernel (except for the hull), comprising the bran, germ, and endosperm, sometimes used in food.
wheatear
  1. Any of various passerine birds of the genus Oenanthe that feed on insects.
  2. Examples:
    1. “I've also noticed a black-eared wheatear that seems to favor the grassy area in front of our barracks.”
      “A wheatear with white eyebrow and orange bib perched nearby, robin shaped, hardly larger, soon to fly to Africa.”
      “Other species such as the wheatear, ring ouzel, and sandwich tern have all been observed about one week earlier than usual.”
wheatmeal
  1. Flour or meal derived from whole grains of wheat, often not finely ground.
  2. Examples:
    1. “Why not give them a potato, carrot and onion vegetable patty in a wheatmeal bun with a layer of baked beans in it?”
      “Biscuits are not quite as difficult in finding substitutions, but all the sweet biscuits should be forgotten and wheatmeal or Milk Arrowroot biscuits be taken instead.”
      “Their exquisitely moulded faces were the colour of wheatmeal porridge slightly browned, with numerous freckles as the bran.”
wheatboard
  1. An ecologically friendly type of board made with processed wheat.
wheatsheaf
  1. A sheaf of wheat, or its representation used as an emblem.
  2. Examples:
    1. “The crest has an oak tree dimidiated with a wheatsheaf, bound together by a blue and white wave.”
      “This would have seen the current station demolished and the area transformed into a public square, with direct access to the Wheatsheaf Centre for shoppers.”
      “The Wheatsheaf, on Mill Lane, St Helens, was selected as one of 21 inter-war pubs as part of a project by Historic England.”
wheatback
  1. An American penny with wheat depicted on its reverse.
wheatbird
  1. A bird that feeds on wheat, especially the chaffinch.
wheatworm
wheatbelt
  1. A region used for the growing of wheat.
  2. Examples:
    1. “Brendan hails from the wheatbelt, where his family wheat farm has gone heavily into value adding, including marron farming.”
      “The red-tailed phascogale is an endangered species that was once widespread over Australia. This species can currently only be found in the wheatbelt of western Australia.”
      “Halse has recently identified a new species of calanoid copepod from saline lakes in the central and southern wheatbelt.”
wheatings
  1. The shorts of milled wheat.
wheatfield
  1. A field of wheat; a plot of land planted with wheat.
  2. Examples:
    1. “In Pieter Bruegel the Elder's painting The Harvesters, peasants enjoy lunch in the sun in a golden wheatfield.”
      “Family hilarity teetered on the edge of hysteria as I chased a piece of A4 across a wheatfield.”
      “They haven't got time to make a rose garden of it, and anyway they want Pm to stay a wheatfield.”
wheaten
  1. A pale yellow or beige colour, like that of wheat.
wheatsel
  1. (Britain, dialect, dated) The time when wheat is sown.
wheatland
  1. An area where wheat is produced.
  2. Examples:
    1. “A similar situation exists in Mongolia, where over the last 20 years half the wheatland has been abandoned and wheat yields have also fallen by half, shrinking the harvest by three fourths.”
      Wheatland County included the survey in their property tax bills to ratepayers.”
      “Scott Meers, insect management specialist with Alberta Agriculture, reports the appearance of cabbage seedpod weevil south of Highway 1 and in the Rocky View, Kneehill and Wheatland areas.”
wheatstalk
  1. A stalk of wheat.
wheatstack
  1. A stack of wheat.
wheatfields
  1. plural of wheatfield
  2. Examples:
    1. “There are wheatfields and hayfields here, corn and sunflowers, and where the land rises, range-land.”
      “Across the smooth, warm expanse of wheatfields, the sky has turned from steady blue to pink and golden and magical.”
      “Inspired by this new light, she created more provençal themes with lavenders, wheatfields and old towns.”
wheatstacks
  1. plural of wheatstack
wheatstalks
  1. plural of wheatstalk
wheatberries
  1. plural of wheatberry
wheatgrasses
  1. plural of wheatgrass
wheatsheaves
  1. plural of wheatsheaf
wheatbacks
  1. plural of wheatback
wheatbirds
  1. plural of wheatbird
wheatlands
  1. plural of wheatland
wheatbelts
  1. plural of wheatbelt
wheatmeals
  1. plural of wheatmeal
wheatworms
  1. plural of wheatworm
wheatears
  1. plural of wheatear
wheats
  1. plural of wheat
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Three species exist both as wild and domesticated wheats, einkorn, emmer, and breadwheat.”
      “The wilderness of saltbush and scrub has given way to orchards and vineyards, to wheats and rice.”
      “It is well known that red-grained wheats show a wider variation in grain dormancy than white-grained wheats.”
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