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单词 deprived
释义

Definition of deprived in English:

deprived

adjective dɪˈprʌɪvddəˈpraɪvd
  • 1Suffering a severe and damaging lack of basic material and cultural benefits.

    the charity cares for destitute and deprived children
    Example sentencesExamples
    • This was expressed in no small part in the faces of around 150,000 orphans living in deprived conditions.
    • People in the countryside as well as the deprived sections in the urban areas are crying for basic facilities.
    • The crusade against poverty will he stepped up too, giving help to deprived neighbourhoods.
    • These children come from deprived backgrounds in slums and many right off the streets.
    • Smokers in deprived areas perceive a lack of support to help them to stop smoking.
    • The real message of the league tables is that they highlight the deprived neighbourhoods.
    • The Government cash will help children in deprived areas by paying for more volunteers to teach the basic skills.
    • Severely deprived, neglected or abused environment will have negative effects on the growth of a child.
    • Most children arriving at the school, some from severely deprived areas, are already below the expected standard aged just three.
    • He said: " The youngsters involved are not just from socially deprived families."
    • She condemned the police tactics, as well as the deprived conditions and lack of opportunities for young people in the area.
    • "The situation is even worse for people living in the most deprived areas."
    • Children from deprived areas are more likely to suffer tooth decay than those from better-off backgrounds.
    • I felt deprived, and was happy that I had James here for me.
    • Doesn't the government say the projects are about solving the problems on deprived council estates?
    • They say about £500 will build one home for people in deprived communities.
    • Hundreds of shops in some of the most deprived parts of the region are to benefit from increased security under a scheme to cut crime and vandalism.
    • The increase in the number of medical students will open the door to a medical career for students from deprived or culturally diverse communities.
    • The government is to target deprived areas where poor families suffer more ill health.
    • Some deprived and orphaned children and adults have benefited from a company's efforts to improve their lives.
    Synonyms
    disadvantaged, underprivileged, poverty-stricken, impoverished, poor, destitute, needy, in need, in want, badly off, unable to make ends meet, in reduced circumstances, unable to keep the wolf from the door
    depressed, distressed, forlorn
    British on the bread line
    formal penurious, impecunious
    rare necessitous
    1. 1.1 (of a person) lacking a specified benefit that is considered important.
      I was so sleep deprived I was bumping into walls
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She was neither a child of the ghetto nor a culturally or educationally deprived person.
      • This can be achieved by concentrating resources on conditions that affect socially and economically deprived people.
      • I was jolted awake into a caffeine deprived state.
      • And it even hints at the possibility of socially deprived people thinking about their larger condition.
      • The sexually deprived people showed a great many more side-effects of all kinds than did the non-deprived people.
      • There's a pattern that some parents exhibit with their children when they themselves have had an emotionally deprived childhood.
      • Nutritionally deprived children experience more health problems than food-secure children including anemia, weight loss, colds, and infections.
      • It did not specify who the "educationally deprived" children were or what kinds of programs would be acceptable.
      • There must be care for those who are socially deprived.
      • Lastly, 134 million children aged between 7 and 18 (13%) are severely educationally deprived - they have never been to school.
      • It's much too easy to laugh at the most abandoned, most cheated and misled, most socially deprived people in the north.
      • This paper describes the behavior of nutritionally deprived children, and findings indicate retarded physical and mental growth.
      • In one-third of families where the child was classified as emotionally deprived there was considerable material deprivation as well.
      • Cross stitching is the artfully deprived persons way of making beautiful pictures.
      • They also assist the juvenile home and run a Community College for economically deprived girls.
 
 

Definition of deprived in US English:

deprived

adjectivedəˈpraɪvddəˈprīvd
  • 1Suffering a severe and damaging lack of basic material and cultural benefits.

    the charity cares for destitute and deprived children
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Some deprived and orphaned children and adults have benefited from a company's efforts to improve their lives.
    • People in the countryside as well as the deprived sections in the urban areas are crying for basic facilities.
    • "The situation is even worse for people living in the most deprived areas."
    • These children come from deprived backgrounds in slums and many right off the streets.
    • The increase in the number of medical students will open the door to a medical career for students from deprived or culturally diverse communities.
    • Children from deprived areas are more likely to suffer tooth decay than those from better-off backgrounds.
    • They say about £500 will build one home for people in deprived communities.
    • Severely deprived, neglected or abused environment will have negative effects on the growth of a child.
    • The Government cash will help children in deprived areas by paying for more volunteers to teach the basic skills.
    • The real message of the league tables is that they highlight the deprived neighbourhoods.
    • She condemned the police tactics, as well as the deprived conditions and lack of opportunities for young people in the area.
    • Doesn't the government say the projects are about solving the problems on deprived council estates?
    • The crusade against poverty will he stepped up too, giving help to deprived neighbourhoods.
    • This was expressed in no small part in the faces of around 150,000 orphans living in deprived conditions.
    • The government is to target deprived areas where poor families suffer more ill health.
    • I felt deprived, and was happy that I had James here for me.
    • Most children arriving at the school, some from severely deprived areas, are already below the expected standard aged just three.
    • Smokers in deprived areas perceive a lack of support to help them to stop smoking.
    • Hundreds of shops in some of the most deprived parts of the region are to benefit from increased security under a scheme to cut crime and vandalism.
    • He said: " The youngsters involved are not just from socially deprived families."
    Synonyms
    disadvantaged, underprivileged, poverty-stricken, impoverished, poor, destitute, needy, in need, in want, badly off, unable to make ends meet, in reduced circumstances, unable to keep the wolf from the door
    1. 1.1 (of a person) suffering a lack of a specified benefit that is considered important.
      I was so sleep deprived I was bumping into walls
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In one-third of families where the child was classified as emotionally deprived there was considerable material deprivation as well.
      • Nutritionally deprived children experience more health problems than food-secure children including anemia, weight loss, colds, and infections.
      • This can be achieved by concentrating resources on conditions that affect socially and economically deprived people.
      • They also assist the juvenile home and run a Community College for economically deprived girls.
      • Lastly, 134 million children aged between 7 and 18 (13%) are severely educationally deprived - they have never been to school.
      • This paper describes the behavior of nutritionally deprived children, and findings indicate retarded physical and mental growth.
      • Cross stitching is the artfully deprived persons way of making beautiful pictures.
      • She was neither a child of the ghetto nor a culturally or educationally deprived person.
      • The sexually deprived people showed a great many more side-effects of all kinds than did the non-deprived people.
      • I was jolted awake into a caffeine deprived state.
      • It did not specify who the "educationally deprived" children were or what kinds of programs would be acceptable.
      • It's much too easy to laugh at the most abandoned, most cheated and misled, most socially deprived people in the north.
      • There's a pattern that some parents exhibit with their children when they themselves have had an emotionally deprived childhood.
      • And it even hints at the possibility of socially deprived people thinking about their larger condition.
      • There must be care for those who are socially deprived.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/20 21:19:54