polyculture

Noun

 * 1)  The planting of two or more crops in the same place.
 * 2)  A multiculture; a polycultural society, sometimes especially one in which multiple cultures exist without one dominating.
 * 3) * 2003 (originally 1992), Roger Hewitt, Language, Youth and the Destabilisation of Ethnicity, R. Harris and B. Rampton (eds.), page 190:
 * What we have here is not a 'multiculture' as it is represented in multiculturalism, not a pluralist order of discrete patches of culture, all somehow, 'equally valid' within the polity, but—to form a Greek/Roman Creole—a polyculture, or at any rate a collection of cultural entities that are not (a) discrete and complete in themselves; (b) that are not in any sense 'intrinsically' 'equal'; and (c) are active together and hence bound up with change.

Translations

 * Dutch: polycultuur, mengteelt
 * Finnish: monipuolinen viljely
 * French:
 * German: Polykultur
 * Greek:
 * Italian: policoltura
 * Polish: polikultura
 * Russian:

Etymology
From.