Aratio, aratiônis, Verbale, Cic.Tillage of the earth: or the earth tilled.Arationes desertæ ac relictæ dominis.Cic.Aratio fructuosa.Cic.Aratiúo cula, huius aratíunculæ, pen. cor. Diminutiuum. Plaut.A litle peece of ground eared.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ărātĭo, ōnis, f. [aro]. I.A ploughing, and in gen. the cultivation of the ground, agriculture: iteratio arationis peracta esse debet, si, etc., Col. 11, 2, 64: aratione per transversum iterata, Plin. 18, 20, 49, 180: ut quaestuosa mercatura, fructuosa aratio dicitur, Cic. Tusc. 5, 31, 86.—II.Meton. (abstr. for concr.), ploughed land, Plaut. Truc. 1, 2, 47 (cf. aratiuncula): (calsa) nascitur in arationibus, Plin. 27, 8, 36, 58.— Esp., in Roman financial lang., the public farms or plots of land farmed out for a tenth of the produce (cf. arator, I. B.), Cic. Phil. 2, 39 fin.; id. Verr. 2, 3, 98.