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poverty

  • 41 grinding

    1) (with a sound of grinding: The train came to a grinding stop.) rangente
    2) (severe: grinding poverty.) esmagador

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > grinding

  • 42 hand in hand

    (with one person holding the hand of another: The boy and girl were walking along hand in hand; Poverty and crime go hand in hand.) de mãos dadas

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > hand in hand

  • 43 housing benefit

    noun (a payment given by a government to people who are entitled to it according to certain criteria (eg poverty) when they buy or rent a house, an apartment etc.)

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > housing benefit

  • 44 instance

    ['instəns]
    (an example, especially of a condition or circumstance: As a social worker, he saw many instances of extreme poverty.) exemplo

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > instance

  • 45 justify

    1) (to prove or show (a person, action, opinion etc) to be just, right, desirable or reasonable: How can the government justify the spending of millions of pounds on weapons when there is so much poverty in the country?) justificar
    2) (to be a good excuse for: Your state of anxiety does not justify your being so rude to me.) justificar
    - justification

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > justify

  • 46 need

    [ni:d] 1. negative short form - needn't; verb
    1) (to require: This page needs to be checked again; This page needs checking again; Do you need any help?) necessitar
    2) (to be obliged: You need to work hard if you want to succeed; They don't need to come until six o'clock; She needn't have given me such an expensive present.) precisar
    2. noun
    1) (something essential, that one must have: Food is one of our basic needs.) necessidade
    2) (poverty or other difficulty: Many people are in great need.) necessidade
    3) (a reason: There is no need for panic.) necessidade, motivo
    - needlessly - needy - a need for - in need of

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > need

  • 47 pinched

    adjective ((of a person's face) looking cold, pale or thin because of cold, poverty etc: Her face was pinched with cold.) contraído

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > pinched

  • 48 privation

    (poverty; hardship.) privação

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > privation

  • 49 relate

    [rə'leit] 1. verb
    1) (to tell (a story etc): He related all that had happened to him.) relatar
    2) ((with to) to be about, concerned or connected with: Have you any information relating to the effect of penicillin on mice?) relacionar-se a
    3) ((with to) to behave towards: He finds it difficult to relate normally to his mother.) relacionar-se
    - relation - relationship - relative 2. adjective
    1) (compared with something else, or with each other, or with a situation in the past etc: the relative speeds of a car and a train; She used to be rich but now lives in relative poverty.) relativo
    2) ((of a pronoun, adjective or clause) referring back to something previously mentioned: the girl who sang the song; the girl who sang the song.) relativo

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > relate

  • 50 relationship

    1) (the friendship, contact, communications etc which exist between people: He finds it very difficult to form lasting relationships.) relação
    2) (the fact that, or the way in which, facts, events etc are connected: Is there any relationship between crime and poverty?) relação
    3) (the state of being related by birth or because of marriage.) parentesco

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > relationship

  • 51 root out

    1) (to pull up or tear out by the roots: The gardener began to root out the weeds.) arrancar
    2) (to get rid of completely: We must do our best to root out poverty.) extirpar

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > root out

  • 52 specify

    1) (to mention particularly: He specified the main ilnesses that are caused by poverty.) especificar
    2) (to order specially: She ordered a cake from the baker and specified green icing.) especificar
    - specifically

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > specify

  • 53 want

    [wont] 1. verb
    1) (to be interested in having or doing, or to wish to have or do (something); to desire: Do you want a cigarette?; She wants to know where he is; She wants to go home.) querer
    2) (to need: This wall wants a coat of paint.) precisar de
    3) (to lack: This house wants none of the usual modern features but I do not like it; The people will want (= be poor) no longer.) carecer de
    2. noun
    1) (something desired: The child has a long list of wants.) desejo
    2) (poverty: They have lived in want for many years.) escassez, carência
    3) (a lack: There's no want of opportunities these days.) falta
    - want ad - want for

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > want

См. также в других словарях:

  • Poverty — • Discusses poverty as a concept and canonical discipline Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Poverty     Poverty     † …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Poverty — Pov er*ty (p[o^]v [ e]r*t[y^]), n. [OE. poverte, OF. povert[ e], F. pauvret[ e], fr. L. paupertas, fr. pauper poor. See {Poor}.] 1. The quality or state of being poor or indigent; want or scarcity of means of subsistence; indigence; need. Swathed …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • poverty — pov‧er‧ty [ˈpɒvəti ǁ ˈpɑːvərti] noun [uncountable] 1. the situation or experience of being poor: • 86% of the population lives in poverty. • a major anti poverty initiative 2. the poverty line the income below which people are officially… …   Financial and business terms

  • poverty — poverty, indigence, penury, want, destitution, privation all denote the state of one who is poor or without enough to live upon. Poverty, the most comprehensive of these terms, typically implies such deficiency of resources that one is deprived… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • poverty — [päv′ər tē] n. [ME poverte < OFr povreté < L paupertas < pauper, POOR] 1. the condition or quality of being poor; indigence; need 2. deficiency in necessary properties or desirable qualities, or in a specific quality, etc.; inadequacy… …   English World dictionary

  • poverty — late 12c., from O.Fr. poverte, from L. paupertatem (nom. paupertas) poverty, from pauper (see POOR (Cf. poor)). Seeing so much poverty everywhere makes me think that God is not rich. He gives the appearance of it, but I suspect some financial… …   Etymology dictionary

  • poverty — poverty, poorness Poverty is the usual noun corresponding to poor in its meanings to do with lack of wealth or lack of things regarded like wealth (e.g. poverty of inspiration). Poorness is not often used and is more usual in meanings to do with… …   Modern English usage

  • poverty — I noun absence, bare subsistence, beggarliness, beggary, dearth, deficiency, deficit, depletion, destitution, difficulty, distress, embarrassed circumstances, exigency, famine, humbleness, impecuniosity, impecuniousness, impoverishment, indigence …   Law dictionary

  • poverty — [n] want; extreme need, often financial abjection, aridity, bankruptcy, barrenness, beggary, dearth, debt, deficiency, deficit, depletion, destitution, difficulty, distress, emptiness, exiguity, famine, hardship, impecuniousness, impoverishment,… …   New thesaurus

  • poverty — ► NOUN 1) the state of being extremely poor. 2) the state of being insufficient in amount. ORIGIN Old French poverte, from Latin pauper poor …   English terms dictionary

  • Poverty — Street children sleeping in Mulberry Street – Jacob Riis photo New York, United States (1890) Poverty is the state of one who lacks a certain amount of material possessions or money.[1] Absolute poverty or destitution is inability to afford …   Wikipedia

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