单词 | famine |
释义 | faminefam‧ine /ˈfæmɪn/ ●○○ noun [countable, uncountable] Word Origin WORD ORIGINfamine ExamplesOrigin: 1300-1400 French, Latin fames ‘hungry condition’EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES Thesaurus
THESAURUSnatural disasters► earthquake Collocations a sudden shaking of the Earth’s surface that often causes a lot of damage: · A powerful earthquake struck the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.· It was the biggest earthquake to hit the Pacific Northwest for 52 years. ► flood a very large amount of water that covers an area that is usually dry: · Bangladesh has been hit by a series of devastating floods (=very bad floods).· The crisis began with floods that covered one third of the countryside. ► drought a long period of dry weather when there is not enough water for plants and animals to live: · The country experienced its worst drought this century.· In East Africa, three years of drought have left 10 million people in urgent need of food and water. ► famine a situation in which a large number of people have little or no food for a long time and many people die: · Poor harvests led to famine.· 4,000,000 people are threatened by famine in northern Ethiopia. ► hurricane a storm that has very strong fast winds and that moves over water – used about storms in the North Atlantic Ocean: · extreme weather such as hurricanes· Hurricane Andrew left southern Florida in ruins. ► typhoon a violent tropical storm – used about storms in the Western Pacific Ocean: · A typhoon has hit the Philippines, lifting roofs off houses and uprooting trees.· ► tsunami a very large wave, caused by extreme conditions such as an earthquake, which can cause a lot of damage when it reaches land: · Thousands of people were killed in the tsunami.· Many Pacific earthquakes have generated tsunamis. Longman Language Activatorwhen people are ill or dying because of not having enough food► hunger · Many people could die from cold and hunger this winter as the war continues.· The slum-dwellers suffer from poverty, hunger, and disease.weak with/from hunger · Weak with hunger, she staggered up to the cabin door. ► starvation suffering or death caused by not having enough food to eat: · The survivors were close to starvation when they were rescued.· A global fall in the price of rice spread hardship and even starvation to many parts of Indochina.die of starvation: · 30 million people die of starvation each year.brink of starvation (=almost dying because of not having enough food): · Thousands of refugees are on the brink of starvation in camps south of the capital. ► malnutrition bad health caused by not eating enough food or by not eating enough of the right kinds of food: · Many of the children showed signs of malnutrition.· A survey of US households found evidence of malnutrition in those persons with the lowest incomes. ► famine a situation in which a large number of people in a country or area are very hungry and many die because the crops of rice, wheat etc have failed: · Millions of people in Africa continue to die because of war and famine.· The four-year drought has caused widespread famine across Afghanistan. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRY► severe/widespread famine a situation in which a large number of people have little or no food for a long time and many people die: the great potato famine in Irelandsevere/widespread famine Widespread famine had triggered a number of violent protests. A million people are facing famine. Widespread famine had triggered a number of violent protests. ► facing famine A million people are facing famine. COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES► famine/flood relief· We donated $1,000 to the American Red Cross for flood relief. ► a famine victim (=someone who has had no food to eat for a long time)· Aid is being shipped to famine victims. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADJECTIVE► great· In 1922 they were the hub of the maelstrom that was the great famine of 1921-2.· Like Concerned Women, it also grew out of the great famine of 1974. ► severe· However, when Karamoja experienced severe famine in 1979 and 1980, aid organizations streamed in to provide relief food. ► widespread· It could mean permanent coastal flooding in some countries and widespread famine in others. NOUN► potato· The potato famine, so many millions of people were affected by it and all the deaths that have occurred.· Their families had come to the United States during the nineteenth-century potato famine. ► relief· A special series of graded poll-taxes towards famine relief began in February 1922.· Then there was the famine relief work, the Ethiopean situation, the Kurdish situation.· Even the famine area was made to pay one-half of the supplemental tax levied for famine relief.· Join a pressure group or raise money for famine relief.· The national union of workers in education and the arts gave 5 percent of their pay for famine relief. ► victim· It hopes to mount 15 flights a day - carrying enough food to feed 500,000 of the most desperate famine victims. VERB► face· United Nations experts say as many as four million people are facing famine after a severe drought and crop failure.· Those who were spared death by disease faced death by famine. |
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