Along with her daily chores the husbandwoman salted, pickled, preserved, and manufactured enough beer and cider to see the family safely through the winter.
Thus, the price of a husbandship is higher when husbandships are scarce, and, similarly, the price of a husbandship is low when husbandships are abundant.
(transitive) To manage or administer carefully and frugally; use to the best advantage; economise. || (transitive) To conserve. || (transitive, obsolete) To till; cultivate; farm; nurture. || (transitive) To provide with a husband. || (transitive) To engage or act as a husband to; assume the care of or responsibility for; accept as one’s own.
If I have an evening performance, I slow down during the afternoon and start husbanding my energy.
|noun|
1.Management and conservation of resources.
‘low borrowing demonstrates astute _husbandry_ of resources’
‘This performance depends on, you guessed it, good _husbandry_ of the economy.’
2.The care, cultivation, and breeding of crops and animals.
‘all aspects of animal _husbandry_ ’
‘We learn about the ecological impacts of agriculture, _husbandry_ , charcoal production, mills and dams, commercial logging, city sewers, and commercial fishing.’