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1 ration
['ræʃən] 1. noun(a measured amount of food etc allowed during a particular period of time: The soldiers were each given a ration of food for the day.) norma, davinys2. verb(to allow only a certain amount of (food etc) to a person or animal during a particular period of time: During the oil shortage, petrol was rationed.) normuoti- rations- ration out -
2 critical
1) (judging and analysing: He has written several critical works on Shakespeare.) kritikos2) (fault-finding: He tends to be critical of his children.) kritiškas, kritiškai nusistatęs3) (of, at or having the nature of, a crisis; very serious: a critical shortage of food; After the accident, his condition was critical.) kritinis, kritiškas, pavojingas -
3 famine
['fæmin]((a) great lack or shortage especially of food: Some parts of the world suffer regularly from famine.) badas -
4 occupation
1) (a person's job or work.) užsiėmimas, darbas, profesija, verslas2) (the act of occupying (a house, town etc).) užėmimas3) (the period of time during which a town, house etc is occupied: During the occupation, there was a shortage of food.) okupacija -
5 suffering
noun ((a feeling of) pain or misery: The shortage of food caused widespread suffering; She keeps complaining about her sufferings.) kančia, kentėjimas
См. также в других словарях:
food shortage — lack of food, famine … English contemporary dictionary
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food — W1S1 [fu:d] n [: Old English; Origin: foda] 1.) [U and C] things that people and animals eat, such as vegetables or meat ▪ The restaurant serves good food at affordable prices. ▪ Try not to eat too much spicy food . ▪ I love Italian food ,… … Dictionary of contemporary English
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Shortage economy — (Polish: gospodarka niedoboru , Hungarian: hiánygazdaság ) is a term coined by the Hungarian economist, János Kornai. This is a term he used to criticize the old centrally planned economies of the communist states of Eastern Europe. In his… … Wikipedia
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shortage — 01. During a time of war, there is generally a [shortage] of oil, so gasoline is usually rationed. 02. The city often puts restrictions on water use in the summertime in order to prevent [shortages]. 03. There is often a water [shortage] in our… … Grammatical examples in English
shortage — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ acute, chronic, critical, desperate, dire, serious, severe ▪ the current acute shortage of teachers ▪ … Collocations dictionary