-
1 raging inflation
эк. = galloping inflation -
2 raging inflation
= rampant inflation безудержная инфляция -
3 raging inflation
Англо-русский словарь по экономике и финансам > raging inflation
-
4 Raging inflation
تضخم عارم -
5 inflation
nto offset inflation — компенсировать потери, вызванные инфляцией
to retard / to slow down inflation — затормозить рост инфляции
to stem / to stop inflation — останавливать рост инфляции
- adjusted for inflationto tame inflation — обуздать инфляцию, справиться с инфляцией
- annual rate of inflation
- anticipated inflation
- backdrop of inflation
- big jolts of inflation
- bottleneck inflation
- continuous inflation
- controlled inflation
- country ravished by inflation
- double-digit inflation
- drop in the rate of inflation
- fall in the rate of inflation
- fluctuations of inflation
- galloping inflation
- hidden inflation
- high inflation
- high rate of inflation
- inflation fell
- inflation held steady
- inflation is getting out of hand
- inflation is on very low levels
- inflation is rampant
- inflation is rising
- inflation is running at 7 percent per month
- inflation mounts
- inflation roars
- jump in inflation
- latent inflation
- long-run inflation
- low inflation
- measures to control the inflation
- mounting inflation
- oil-led inflation
- open inflation
- persistent inflation
- price inflation
- raging inflation
- rampant inflation
- rapid inflation - resurgence of inflation
- rise in inflation
- rising inflation
- rising tide of inflation
- savings are being eroded by inflation
- single-digit inflation
- soaring inflation
- spiral inflation
- spiraling inflation
- steady inflation
- suppressed inflation
- surging inflation
- sustained inflation
- the latest inflation figures
- threat of renewed inflation
- unanticipated inflation
- uncontrollable inflation
- uncontrolled inflation
- wage inflation
- wave of inflation
- worsening inflation
- zero inflation -
6 raging
['reɪdʒɪŋ]1) [passion, argument] violento; [thirst, pain] terribile, atroce2) [blizzard, sea] infuriato* * *adjective (violent; extreme: raging toothache; a raging storm.) violento, terribile* * *raging /ˈreɪdʒɪŋ/a.1 violento; atroce: a raging toothache, un mal di denti atroce; a raging fever, una febbre violenta (fam.: da cavallo); the raging sea, il mare infuriato● raging inflation, inflazione galoppante □ raging mad, pazzo furiosoragingly avv.* * *['reɪdʒɪŋ]1) [passion, argument] violento; [thirst, pain] terribile, atroce2) [blizzard, sea] infuriato -
7 inflation
инфляция, обесценение денег -
8 raging
-
9 raging
* * *rag·ing[ˈreɪʤɪŋ]the rains had turned the stream into a \raging torrent die Regenfälle hatten den Bach in einen reißenden Strom verwandeltthe \raging floodwaters die reißenden Flutena \raging inferno ein flammendes Infernoa \raging blizzard/gale ein tobender Schneesturm/Sturmthe \raging sea die tosende Seea \raging storm ein heftiges Unwetter4. (severe) rasenda \raging fever wahnsinniges Fieber fama \raging headache/toothache rasende Kopf-/Zahnschmerzen plto have a \raging temperature sehr hohes Fieber haben\raging thirst schrecklicher Dursta \raging bore ein totaler Langweiler fama \raging success ein voller Erfolg* * *['reIdZɪŋ]1. adjperson wütend; fever heftig, sehr hoch; temperature sehr hoch; thirst brennend; pain, toothache rasend; storm, sea, wind tobend; inflation galoppierend; debate hitzig, wütend, heftig; nationalist, feminist radikal, extrem, heftig; nationalism, feminism radikal, extremhe was raging — er tobte
to be raging mad (inf) — eine Stinkwut haben (inf)
2. n(of person, storm) Toben nt, Rasen nt; (of sea) Toben nt* * *adj.rasend adj.stürmend adj.wütend adj. -
10 raging
adjective (violent; extreme: raging toothache; a raging storm.) atroz, agudo (dolor); violento, furiosotr['reɪʤɪŋ]1 (headache, thirst) terribleadj.• furibundo, -a adj.• furioso, -a adj.• rabioso, -a adj.• violento, -a adj.['reɪdʒɪŋ]1. ADJ1) (=fierce) [temper] furioso, rabioso; [debate] acalorado; [nationalist, feminist] acérrimo, a ultranza; [nationalism] enfervorizadoto be raging mad — estar loco de furia or ira
2) (=violent) [storm, thunder, blizzard] violento, rugiente; [wind, torrent] enfurecido, rugiente; [sea] embravecido, enfurecido, rugiente; [fire] violento3) (=intense) [temperature, fever, inflation] altísimo; [illness, headache, toothache] atroz; [thirst] horroroso2.N [of person] furia f -
11 rampant inflation
-
12 galloping inflation
эк. галопирующая инфляция (инфляция, характеризующаяся скачкообразными темпами)Syn:See:* * ** * *. . Словарь экономических терминов .* * *галопирующая инфляция в отличие от ползучей трудно управляемая; темп роста цен выражается двузначными цифрами -
13 безудержная инфляция
Русско-английский политический словарь > безудержная инфляция
-
14 disparado
adj.1 shot.2 disproportionate.past part.past participle of spanish verb: disparar.* * *► adjetivo1 familiar in a hurry* * *ADJ1) (=con prisa)salir disparado — to shoot out, be off like a shot
2) Caribe ** randy *, horny *** * *- da adjetivo (fam)salir disparado — ( irse de prisa) to shoot off (colloq)
pasó disparado — he shot by like greased lightning
* * *= sharply rising, raging, galloping, soaring.Ex. The end of the eighteenth century saw a sharply rising demand for cheap print, associated with increases in population and in literacy which occurred all over Europe.Ex. This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.Ex. But the introduction of market economics, galloping inflation and the breakdown of old administrative structures are causing problems, especially over funding..Ex. And to make matters worse, retirees on fixed incomes have recently presented the mayor with a petition deploring the soaring property taxes.----* coste disparado = escalating cost.* costes disparados = spiralling costs, soaring cost.* inflación disparada = rampant inflation, soaring inflation, runaway inflation.* precios disparados = spiralling prices.* salir disparado = bolt, make + a bolt for, shoot off, dash off, take to + Posesivo + heels, run off.* * *- da adjetivo (fam)salir disparado — ( irse de prisa) to shoot off (colloq)
pasó disparado — he shot by like greased lightning
* * *= sharply rising, raging, galloping, soaring.Ex: The end of the eighteenth century saw a sharply rising demand for cheap print, associated with increases in population and in literacy which occurred all over Europe.
Ex: This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.Ex: But the introduction of market economics, galloping inflation and the breakdown of old administrative structures are causing problems, especially over funding..Ex: And to make matters worse, retirees on fixed incomes have recently presented the mayor with a petition deploring the soaring property taxes.* coste disparado = escalating cost.* costes disparados = spiralling costs, soaring cost.* inflación disparada = rampant inflation, soaring inflation, runaway inflation.* precios disparados = spiralling prices.* salir disparado = bolt, make + a bolt for, shoot off, dash off, take to + Posesivo + heels, run off.* * *disparado -da( fam):salir disparado «objeto» to shoot out;«persona» (irse de prisa) to shoot off ( colloq)(salir lanzado): con el choque salió disparado del asiento the impact catapulted him from his seatiba disparado y ni me saludó he was in a tremendous hurry and didn't even say hello to me ( colloq)* * *
Del verbo disparar: ( conjugate disparar)
disparado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
disparado
disparar
disparado◊ -da adjetivo (fam): salir disparado ( irse de prisa) to shoot off (colloq);
con el choque salió disparado del asiento the impact catapulted him from his seat;
ver tb disparar
disparar ( conjugate disparar) verbo intransitivo
◊ disparado al aire to fire o shoot into the air;
disparado a matar to shoot to kill;
le disparó por la espalda he shot him in the back;
disparado a quemarropa or a bocajarro to fire at point-blank range;
disparado contra algn to shoot o fire at sbb) (Dep) to shoot
verbo transitivo
1
‹tiro/proyectil› to fire;
b) (Dep):
2 (Méx fam) ( pagar) to buy
dispararse verbo pronominal
1
b) ( refl):
2 (fam) [ precio] to shoot up, rocket
disparado,-a adj loc salimos disparados de allí, we shot out of there
disparar verbo transitivo
1 (un arma de fuego) to fire
(un proyectil) to shoot: le dispararon en el hombro, he was shot in the shoulder
2 Ftb to shoot
disparar a puerta, to shoot at goal
' disparado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
disparada
English:
balloon
- dash out
- shoot
- shoot out
- spiral up
- tear off
- bolt
- scurry
* * *disparado, -a adjsalir/entrar disparado to shoot out/in;todos los días sale disparado de casa he leaves the house in a rush every day* * *adj:* * *disparado, -da adj -
15 desaforado
adj.1 excessive, desperate, out of control.2 lawless.past part.past participle of spanish verb: desaforar.* * *► adjetivo1 (exagerado) huge, enormous, terrible2 (escandaloso) outrageous3 (fuera de la ley) lawless* * *ADJ [comportamiento] outrageous; [persona] lawless, disorderly; [grito] ear-splittinges un desaforado — he's a violent sort, he's dangerously excitable
* * *I II- da masculino, femeninocomo un desaforado — < correr> hell for leather; < gritar> at the top of one's voice
* * *= raging, intemperate, riotous, outrageous, excessive, desperate, out-of-control, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], ardent.Ex. This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.Ex. From hermeneutics to the most intemperate positivism, the real challenge is that of conceiving a general methodology.Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.Ex. There must be few other ways of leaving oneself so vulnerable to the slings and arrows of outrageous (or outraged) critics.Ex. Excessive emphasis on the need to exact payment will stifle the flow of information.Ex. Compassion shadowed the trustee's face -- she could see he was desperate -- and compassion was in her voice as she answered: 'All right, I'll go over this afternoon'.Ex. This article discusses the out-of-control situation of federal paperwork and the consequent burdens it places on the US public and business sector.Ex. The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.Ex. Significantly, however, Panizzi's rules did not prove as viable as did his ideology, and they were promptly and materially changed and recast by his most ardent admirers and followers.* * *I II- da masculino, femeninocomo un desaforado — < correr> hell for leather; < gritar> at the top of one's voice
* * *= raging, intemperate, riotous, outrageous, excessive, desperate, out-of-control, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], ardent.Ex: This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.
Ex: From hermeneutics to the most intemperate positivism, the real challenge is that of conceiving a general methodology.Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.Ex: There must be few other ways of leaving oneself so vulnerable to the slings and arrows of outrageous (or outraged) critics.Ex: Excessive emphasis on the need to exact payment will stifle the flow of information.Ex: Compassion shadowed the trustee's face -- she could see he was desperate -- and compassion was in her voice as she answered: 'All right, I'll go over this afternoon'.Ex: This article discusses the out-of-control situation of federal paperwork and the consequent burdens it places on the US public and business sector.Ex: The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.Ex: Significantly, however, Panizzi's rules did not prove as viable as did his ideology, and they were promptly and materially changed and recast by his most ardent admirers and followers.* * *1 ‹fiesta› riotous, wild; ‹ambición› unbridled, boundless; ‹grito› terrible2 ‹partidario/nacionalista› ardent, ferventmasculine, femininese puso a comer como un desaforado he started eating as if he hadn't eaten in a weekcorrieron como desaforados they ran hell for leather o like crazy ( colloq)gritaba como un desaforado he was shouting at the top of his voice o like a madman, he was shouting his head off ( colloq)* * *
Del verbo desaforar: ( conjugate desaforar)
desaforado es:
el participio
desaforado◊ -da sustantivo masculino, femenino: como un desaforado ‹ correr› hell for leather;
‹ gritar› at the top of one's voice
' desaforado' also found in these entries:
English:
wild
* * *desaforado, -a♦ adj[gritos, baile, carrera] wild; [ambición, codicia, deseo] unbridled, wild; [celebración, fiesta] wild; [comilona, borrachera] enormous, gargantuan♦ nm,flos hinchas gritaban como desaforados the fans screamed wildly;bailaba/comía como un desaforado he danced/ate like a man possessed* * *adj1 ambición boundless2 grito ear-splitting -
16 desenfrenado
adj.wild, unchecked, uncontrolled, unrestrained.past part.past participle of spanish verb: desenfrenar.* * *1→ link=desenfrenar desenfrenar► adjetivo1 (gen) frantic, uncontrolled, wild2 (pasiones, vicios) unbridled, uncontrolled* * *ADJ [persona] wild, uncontrolled; [apetito, pasiones] unbridled* * *a un ritmo desenfrenado — at a hectic o frenetic pace
sus ansias desenfrenadas de éxito — his intense o burning desire to succeed
* * *= headlong, unrestrained, rampant, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], raging, unbridled, on the loose, runaway, roistering, frenzied, fast and furious.Ex. Neither was there doubt that SLIS should adapt their programmes accordingly but, equally, too headlong a rush into the unknown posed dangers.Ex. 'Hello, Tom!' said the director, greeting him enthusiastically, as he rounded his desk to shake hands, which he did with unrestrained ardor.Ex. And so, the public library was conceived as a deterrent to irresponsibility, intemperance, and rampant democracy.Ex. The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.Ex. This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.Ex. Unbridled photocopying will lead to the imminent demise of the communications skein.Ex. The article 'Librarians on the loose' reports on visits to foreign libraries by several Zimbabwe librarians.Ex. The article is entitled 'How to control a runaway state documents collection'.Ex. Morris writes rhapsodically about celebrity-studded parties, roistering interludes with major writers and artists, as well as gossip-column habitues.Ex. There was a frenzied last-minute rush by Indians to do their bit to see the Taj Mahal through to the elite list of the new Seven Wonders of the World.Ex. The pace was fast and furious and the noise was non-stop.* * *a un ritmo desenfrenado — at a hectic o frenetic pace
sus ansias desenfrenadas de éxito — his intense o burning desire to succeed
* * *= headlong, unrestrained, rampant, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], raging, unbridled, on the loose, runaway, roistering, frenzied, fast and furious.Ex: Neither was there doubt that SLIS should adapt their programmes accordingly but, equally, too headlong a rush into the unknown posed dangers.
Ex: 'Hello, Tom!' said the director, greeting him enthusiastically, as he rounded his desk to shake hands, which he did with unrestrained ardor.Ex: And so, the public library was conceived as a deterrent to irresponsibility, intemperance, and rampant democracy.Ex: The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.Ex: This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.Ex: Unbridled photocopying will lead to the imminent demise of the communications skein.Ex: The article 'Librarians on the loose' reports on visits to foreign libraries by several Zimbabwe librarians.Ex: The article is entitled 'How to control a runaway state documents collection'.Ex: Morris writes rhapsodically about celebrity-studded parties, roistering interludes with major writers and artists, as well as gossip-column habitues.Ex: There was a frenzied last-minute rush by Indians to do their bit to see the Taj Mahal through to the elite list of the new Seven Wonders of the World.Ex: The pace was fast and furious and the noise was non-stop.* * *desenfrenado -da‹apetito› insatiable; ‹pasión› unbridled; ‹baile/ritmo› frenzied; ‹odio› violent, intenseviven a un ritmo desenfrenado they live at a hectic o frenzied pacesus ansias desenfrenadas de éxito his intense o burning desire to succeed* * *
Del verbo desenfrenar: ( conjugate desenfrenar)
desenfrenado es:
el participio
desenfrenado,-a adj (ritmo, etc) frantic, uncontrolled
(vicio, pasión) unbridled
' desenfrenado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desenfrenada
English:
mad
- rampant
- riotous
- unrestrained
- wild
- unbridled
* * *desenfrenado, -a adj[ritmo, baile, carrera] frantic, frenzied; [fiesta, juerga, diversión] wild; [vida] wild, riotous; [comportamiento] uncontrolled; [deseo, pasión, entusiasmo] unbridled; [apetito] insatiable;el público bailaba desenfrenado the audience were dancing in a frenzy* * *adj frenzied, hectic* * *desenfrenado, -da adj: unbridled, unrestrained -
17 enloquecido
adj.maddened, crazed, crazy, freaked-out.past part.past participle of spanish verb: enloquecer.* * *ADJ crazed, frenzied* * *= raging, maddened, berserk.Ex. This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.Ex. The author portrayed the hero so maddened as to kill his wife and sons.Ex. Today, hyperbolic comic and cartoon imagery is an established movie aesthetic -- a berserk but ironic Pop Art expressionism.* * *= raging, maddened, berserk.Ex: This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.
Ex: The author portrayed the hero so maddened as to kill his wife and sons.Ex: Today, hyperbolic comic and cartoon imagery is an established movie aesthetic -- a berserk but ironic Pop Art expressionism.* * *enloquecido, -a adjmad, crazed -
18 szal|eć
impf (eję, szalał, szaleli) vi 1. (wariować) to be mad, to be frantic- szaleć z bólu/gniewu to be frantic with pain/anger- szaleć z miłości/ze szczęścia to be mad with love/happiness- szaleć z radości to be transported with joy- szalała po śmierci dziecka she was frantic with grief after the death of her child ⇒ oszaleć2. (hulać) to revel- szaleli całą noc they revelled all night ⇒ zaszaleć3. przen. [burza, pożar, choroba, terror] to rage- szalejąca inflacja/recesja the raging inflation/recession4. pot. (uwielbiać) to be crazy- szaleć na punkcie dziewczyny/sportu to be crazy about a girl/sport- szaleć za chłopakami/słodyczami/nartami to be crazy about boys/sweets/skiing5. pot. (robić coś z pasją) szaleć w pracy to work like mad a. crazy- szaleć z zakupami/ze sprzątaniem to shop/clean like crazy■ jak szaleć, to szaleć we might as well go the whole hogThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > szal|eć
-
19 temper
1. n нрав, характер; душевный складquick temper — вспыльчивость, горячность
bad temper — тяжёлый характер; дурной нрав
spitfire temper — вспыльчивый характер, вспыльчивость
2. n вспыльчивый характер; крутой нрав; раздражительность, несдержанностьto be in a temper, to show temper — быть раздражённым, злиться; гневаться
3. n сдержанность, самообладание4. n настроение5. n степень твёрдости и упругостиthe temper of the clay was just right for shaping — глина была доведена как раз до такого состояния, которое нужно для формовки
6. n метал. процентное содержание углерода7. n метал. закалка; отпуск8. n метал. хим. состав9. n метал. уст. гармония; гармоничность; пропорциональность10. n метал. уст. компромисс, средняя линия11. n метал. уст. темперамент12. v умерять, смягчать; сдерживать13. v смягчаться; сдерживаться14. v удачно сочетать, смешивать в нужных пропорциях; регулировать15. v доводить до нужного состояния16. v приходить в нужное состояние17. v смешивать краски18. v делать смесь19. v метал. отпускать, закаливать20. v закаливаться21. v закалять, давать закалкуthis generation has been tempered by the sacrifices of the war — жертвы, которые это поколение принесло во время войны, закалили его
22. v муз. темперировать23. v уст. приводить в хорошее расположение духаСинонимический ряд:1. composure (noun) aloofness; calmness; composure; coolness; equanimity; equilibrium; moderation; poise; tranquility; tranquillity2. disposition (noun) character; complexion; disposition; humour; individualism; individuality; makeup; nature; personality3. mood (noun) climate; constitution; humor; make-up; mind; mood; spirit; spirits; strain; timbre; tone; vein4. passion (noun) anger; choler; fit; furor; ire; irritation; passion; rage; resentment5. temperament (noun) irascibility; spleen; temperament6. adapt (verb) accommodate; adapt; adjust; fit; suit7. blend (verb) blend; knead; mix; moisten; work8. harden (verb) anneal; harden; indurate; petrify; solidify; strengthen; toughen9. moderate (verb) moderate; modulate; mute; restrain; subdue; tame; tone down10. soften (verb) allay; assuage; calm; mellow; mitigate; mollify; pacify; season; soften; sootheАнтонимический ряд:anger; composure; intensify; weaken
См. также в других словарях:
raging — rag|ing [ˈreıdʒıŋ] adj [only before noun] 1.) very great and hard to control ▪ a raging appetite ▪ I was in a raging temper. 2.) continuing strongly and showing no signs of ending ▪ a raging debate ▪ raging inflation ▪ The show was a raging… … Dictionary of contemporary English
raging — [[t]re͟ɪʤɪŋ[/t]] 1) ADJ: ADJ n Raging water moves very forcefully and violently. The field trip involved crossing a raging torrent. 2) ADJ: ADJ n Raging fire is very hot and fierce. As he came closer he saw a gigantic wall of raging flame before… … English dictionary
inflation — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ high, massive ▪ low, moderate ▪ zero ▪ galloping (esp. BrE), raging (esp. BrE) … Collocations dictionary
raging — adj. Raging is used with these nouns: ↑alcoholic, ↑blizzard, ↑controversy, ↑debate, ↑fever, ↑fire, ↑inflation, ↑river, ↑sea, ↑storm, ↑thirst, ↑torrent … Collocations dictionary
motion picture, history of the — Introduction history of the medium from the 19th century to the present. Early years, 1830–1910 Origins The illusion of motion pictures is based on the optical phenomena known as persistence of vision and the phi phenomenon. The first … Universalium
Coins of the Rupiah — Indonesian rupiah coinage was first issued in 1951 and 1952, a year or so later than the first Indonesian rupiah banknotes printed following the peace treaty with The Netherlands, agreed in November 1949. Although revolutionary currency had been… … Wikipedia
CMI Gold & Silver Inc. — CMI Gold Silver Inc. (Cmigs) is one of the oldest precious metals bullion dealers in the United States. The company is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona where it was organized in 1973 to sell various forms of .999 fine silver bullion to… … Wikipedia
Baby Boomer — is a term used to describe a person who was born during the Post World War II baby boom between 1946 and 1964. [ [http://www.statcan.gc.ca/Daily/English/061026/d061026b.htm Statistics Canada Canada s population by age and sex] ] [… … Wikipedia
Demographics of the United States — As of today s date, the United States has a total resident population of 312,615,000, making it the third most populous country in the world. It is a very urbanized population, with 82% residing in cities and suburbs as of 2008 (the worldwide… … Wikipedia
History of banking in China — The history of banking in China includes the business of dealing with money and credit transactions in China. Early Chinese banks Chinese financial institutions were conducting all major banking functions, including the acceptance of deposits,… … Wikipedia
Malnutrition in Zimbabwe — Political Problem Zimbabwe, a country in southern Africa, is suffering from many diseases, such as HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. “One in four human beings is malnourished” in Africa, but Zimbabwe is near the deep end with almost 12,000… … Wikipedia