sokha · noun — russian ard (a type of wooden plough with high, horizontal draft-poles and usually two metal-tipped ploughshares, originating in Northern Russia in medieval times and widely used in Russia and nearby countries until the early 20th century).
Definition from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).
Among words judged in Lexicurio's Arena, sokha ranks #17,060 of 43,225 for Qualifying.
Etymology
Borrowed from Russian соха́ (soxá), from Proto-Slavic *soxa.
noun
- Russian ard (a type of wooden plough with high, horizontal draft-poles and usually two metal-tipped ploughshares, originating in Northern Russia in medieval times and widely used in Russia and nearby countries until the early 20th century)e.g.“As stony soil predominates, and as it is necessary in many localities to plough lands cleared of forest, special types of implements have been invented in Russia, namely the sokha and the borona-smyk.” — 1893, “XII. Farming machines and implements”, in J. M. Crawford, editor, The Industries of Russia, volume III:
Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).