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Scarcity   /skˈɛrsɪti/   Listen
Scarcity

noun
1.
A small and inadequate amount.  Synonym: scarceness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Scarcity" Quotes from Famous Books



... black troops in the Colonial Corps in the front-line of assault, all exultant and inspired by a belief in victory, swept through the forward zone of the German defenses, astonished, and then disconcerted by the scarcity of Germans, until an annihilating barrage fire dropped upon them and smashed their human waves. From French officers and nurses I heard appalling tales of this tragedy. The death—wail of the black troops froze the blood of Frenchmen with horror. Their own losses were immense ...
— Now It Can Be Told • Philip Gibbs

... probable that the practice of chinking grew up out of the scarcity of water, when walls were erected during the dry season and finished when the rains made the manufacture of mud mortar less of a task. The rough wall shown in the illustration is the outside of an interior wall of a kiva, and it was probably covered by the rectangular inclosing wall that came outside ...
— The Cliff Ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona • Cosmos Mindeleff

... successes and not in their disasters. From these developments, then, he persuaded them to expect some fortunate outcome, but from the honey to expect disease (because invalids crave it) and from the milk famine; for they should encounter so great a scarcity of provisions as to seek for food of native growth ...
— Dio's Rome, Volume 1 (of 6) • Cassius Dio

... reflux, constantly changing their elements and yielding them up to one another where the modern means of production, instead of coinciding with a stagnant population, rather compensate for the relative scarcity of heads and hands; and, finally, where the feverishly youthful life of material production, which has to appropriate a new world to itself, has so far left neither time nor opportunity to abolish the illusions of old. [3 This was written at the ...
— The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte • Karl Marx

... never taken Sylvia's advice. The tramp known to her by the name of Freeman—that in which he received his pension—lodged with her still, and paid his meagre shilling in advance, weekly. A shilling was meagre in those hard days of scarcity. A hungry man might easily eat the produce of ...
— Sylvia's Lovers, Vol. III • Elizabeth Gaskell


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